World Co-operative Monitor - International Co
Transcription
World Co-operative Monitor - International Co
Take part in the 2015 Monitor’s call for data Visit www.monitor.coop and complete the online survey · Showcase your co-operative in the 2015 World Co-operative Monitor Featured stories are selected from co-operatives that complete the survey · Spread the word Share the World Co-operative Monitor and encourage co-operatives in your sector or area to participate Create your own monitor Create a national or regional ranking based on the World Co-operative Monitor methodology Contact monitor@monitor.coop to learn more EXPLORING THE CO-OPERATIVE ECONOMY www.monitor.coop EXPLORING THE CO-OPERATIVE ECONOMY - REPORT 2014 · EXPLORING THE CO-OPERATIVE ECONOMY REPORT 2014 EXPLORING THE CO-OPERATIVE ECONOMY THE WORLD CO-OPERATIVE MONITOR IS AN ALLIANCE INITIATIVE WITH THE SCIENTIFIC SUPPORT OF EURICSE MADE POSSIBLE BY THE SUPPORT OF OUR ORGANISATIONAL PARTNERS For information contact www.monitor.coop THE 2014 WORLD CO-OPERATIVE MONITOR EXPLORING THE CO-OPERATIVE ECONOMY The importance of the co-operative sector and its impact around the world continues to be ever more studied and highlighted. However, the economic and social dimensions are yet to be fully understood and demonstrated. The ongoing goal of the World Co-operative Monitor, now in its third edition, is to increase and enhance the available data on co-operatives in order to present a more nuanced view of their actual contributions to the socio-economic welfare of countries around the world. The World Co-operative Monitor, an ambitious partnership between the International Co-operative Alliance (the Alliance) and the European Research Institute on Cooperative and Social Enterprises (Euricse) collects available economic and social data on the world’s co-operative enterprises in efforts to demonstrate the global existence and viability of this model as an alternative to the traditionally dominant for-profit stakeholder model. The 2014 edition presents results of data analysis on the largest co-operatives around the world using 2012 data. As in the previous edition, the report is intended to be exploratory, and does not attempt to be all-inclusive; rather, it is an overview of a significant part of the worldwide The Alliance Director-General Charles Gould co-operative movement. Our goal is to increasingly move beyond both the 300 largest groups and the measure of annual turnover. To accomplish this, the Alliance and Euricse partner with other co-operative lists, by country and sector, sharing data where possible and making it available to the co-operative community. Our aim is to also deepen collaboration with local researchers, national statistics agencies, local representatives, and global institutions such as the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) and the International Labour Organization (ILO). We also invite co-operative enterprises, groups and federations to share their data directly at www. monitor.coop (see the full list of contributing organizations in Appendix 3). The co-operatives featured in the 2014 World Co-operative Monitor stories were chosen from among those that completed the survey, from which the data about each co-operative was extracted. We would like to thank them, the sponsors of the 2014 edition, and all the organizations that submitted data for being a part of the initiative and helping to achieve greater recognition of the importance of the worldwide co-operative movement. Euricse CEO Gianluca Salvatori INDEX Register for the global Co-operative marque and a “.Coop” domain name at www.identity.coop THE WORLD CO-OPERATIVE MONITOR: MONITORING THE ECONOMIC AND SOCIAL IMPACT OF CO-OPERATIVES 02 THE POPULATION UNDER STUDY 03 THE SET OF INDICATORS 04 THE METHODOLOGY FOR DATA COLLECTION 05 THE WORLD CO-OPERATIVE MONITOR QUESTIONNAIRE FIELDS 07 STRENGTHENING THE WORLD CO-OPERATIVE MONITOR 08 THE WORLD CO-OPERATIVE MONITOR: FINDINGS FOR 2012 10 THE WORLD CO-OPERATIVE MONITOR DATABASE13 LOOKING AT THE CO-OPERATIVES WITH TURNOVER OF OVER 100 MILLION USD 15 AGRICULTURE AND FOOD INDUSTRIES 17 WHOLESALE AND RETAIL TRADE 21 INDUSTRY AND UTILITIES 25 HEALTH AND SOCIAL CARE 29 OTHER SERVICES 33 BANKING AND FINANCIAL SERVICES 37 INSURANCE CO-OPERATIVES AND MUTUALS 41 TOP 300 45 INTERVIEW WITH THE INTERNATIONAL LABOUR ORGANIZATION 48 WCM STORIES 50 APPENDIX 1. THE 300 LARGEST CO-OPERATIVE AND MUTUAL ORGANISATIONS BY TURNOVER 64 APPENDIX 2. THE 300 LARGEST CO-OPERATIVE AND MUTUAL ORGANISATIONS BY TURNOVER ON GDP PER CAPITA 78 APPENDIX 3. CO-OPERATIVES THAT COMPLETED THE WORLD CO-OPERATIVE MONITOR SURVEY 92 REFERENCES 97 THE WORLD CO-OPERATIVE MONITOR TEAM & STEERING COMMITTEE 98 THE WORLD CO-OPERATIVE MONITOR MONITORING THE ECONOMIC AND SOCIAL IMPACT OF CO-OPERATIVES The World Co-operative Monitor is an International Co-operative Alliance (the Alliance) initiative with the scientific support of the European Research Institute on Cooperative and Social Enterprises (Euricse). Launched in 2012, the project continues the work started by the Alliance with the Global300, broadening its goals and reviewing its methodology. The purpose of this project is to collect robust economic, organisational, and social data about not only the top 300 co-operative and mutual organisations worldwide but also an expanded number of co-operatives in order to represent the co-operative sector in its organisational, regional, and sectorial diversity. In summary, the project aims to achieve, within a few years, a number of objectives, including: ·· Raising the profile of co-operatives within their own industries and countries, as well as internationally; ·· Demonstrating the economic and social importance of co-operatives and mutuals to government and regulatory agencies; ·· Modeling good practice and highlighting successful co-operative business models and innovative approaches; and ·· Creating networks between co-operatives and mutuals within the World Co-operative Monitor for greater information sharing, business intelligence, and business opportunities. The methodological aspects of the project include three issues: i) the definition of the population under study, ii) the identification of a set of indicators, and iii) the development of a new methodology for data collection. To ensure the quality of the project, all decisions relating to these three issues have been validated by a scientific committee composed of an international group of researchers and experts with proven experience in the field of scientific research relevant to the field of co-operatives. 2 this problem face two main issues: i) the diversity of national legislation, and ii) the variety of co-operative forms. Table 1 shows the types of co-operative organisations subject to analysis, as a synthesis of research work done by the Research Team of the World Co-operative Monitor. In addition, non-co-operative enterprises in which co-operatives have a controlling interest have been considered in the study. In order to evaluate the role and importance of the co-operative movement within the global economy and of co-operatives within their economic context, it is very important to consider not only their direct impact but also their indirect impact. In other words, the value created in the final production process has to be added to those created in previous productive rounds. The population under study Reaching an understanding of the whole co-operative movement represents the biggest challenge for the World Co-operative Monitor project. For this reason, providing a clear and agreed upon definition of the population under study is the first methodological problem that the researchers have faced. For the purpose of the project, it is of fundamental importance that the boundaries of the population under study are understandable worldwide; it is especially critical that they reflect the characteristics of co-operative organisations in different areas of the world and diverse contexts. The process of definition and classification, however, is not trivial; it requires strong effort, as researchers working on T. 1 THE WORLD CO-OPERATIVE MONITOR CO-OPERATIVE ORGANISATIONAL TYPES Co-operative type Definition CO-OPERATIVE An autonomous association composed mainly of persons united voluntarily to meet their common economic, social, and cultural needs and aspirations through a jointly owned and democratically controlled enterprise which acts according to internationally agreed upon values and principles as outlined by the International Co-operative Alliance. Members usually receive limited compensation, if any, on capital subscribed as a condition of membership. MUTUAL A private co-operative type organisation providing insurance or other welfare-related services. Consider also micro-insurance and mutuals with both voluntary and compulsory membership. CO-OPERATIVE OF CO-OPERATIVES/MUTUALS Co-operatives composed mainly of co-operatives/mutuals that carry out an economic activity for the production of goods or the provision of services of common interest for their members. It periodically publishes its own financial statements. CO-OPERATIVE GROUP A co-operative group is: 1) is composed of organisations that operate as a single economic entity, 2) regularly publishes a consolidated financial statement, 3) includes mainly co-operatives, 4) acts according to co-operative principles and values, and 5) is controlled by co-operatives. CO-OPERATIVE NETWORK A co-operative network is: 1) composed of organisations that operate as a single economic entity, 2) does not publish a consolidated financial statement, 3) includes mainly co-operatives, 4) acts according co-operative principles and values, and 5) is controlled by co-operatives. NON-CO-OPERATIVE ENTERPRISE A non-co-operative enterprise in which co-operatives have a controlling interest. 3 THE WORLD CO-OPERATIVE MONITOR: EXPLORING THE CO-OPERATIVE ECONOMY | REPORT 2014 With a look at existing projects such as the Global Impact Investing Network (GIIN) the World Co-operative Monitor is focused on the collection of very few SMART2 indicators as described in the World Co-operative Monitor Metrics Framework Structure (Table 2). The set of indicators As stated in the introduction, one of the long-term aims of the World Co-operative Monitor Project is to collect data that can assess not only the economic, but also the social and environmental impacts of the largest co-operatives worldwide. T. 2 THE WORLD CO-OPERATIVE METRICS FRAMEWORK STRUCTURE ORGANISATION DESCRIPTION Metrics that focus on operational model, type of organisation, sector of activity, and location OPERATIONAL IMPACT Metrics that describe the organisation’s members, employees, and volunteers PRODUCT DESCRIPTION Metrics that describe the organisation’s products and services PRODUCT IMPACT Metrics that describe the performance and reach of the organisation’s products and services FINANCIAL PERFORMANCE Reported financial metrics GLOSSARY Definitions for common terms that are referenced in the metrics Actually the World Co-operative Monitor is mainly focused on 3 sections: organisation description, financial performance, and operational impact. The organisation description is related to collection of general data of organisations, such as name, year founded, location of headquarters, organisation type, sector of activity, and so on. Looking at the financial performance section, the choice of economic data to be collected is based on the analysis of the most recent developments of scientific thought concerning 1 2 the measurement of the economic performance of co-operatives. In recent years, the international scientific debate has focused on the identification of indicators that can be used to effectively evaluate the economic performance of co-operatives while allowing for global comparisons (Beaubien and Rixon, 2012; Beaubien, 2011; López-Espinosa et al., 2009; Marin-Sanchez and Melia-Martì, 2006). In particular, several researchers focused on the fact that co-operatives’ economic efficiency cannot be evaluated using the traditional economic and financial indicators www.thegiin.org This is an acronym for Simple, Measurable, Appropriate, Realistic and Timely. For more than three decades, the acronym SMART has been widely used in various ways in management (Doran, 1981). 4 THE WORLD CO-OPERATIVE MONITOR: EXPLORING THE CO-OPERATIVE ECONOMY | REPORT 2014 that, despite significant differences in the financial statements analysed, net interest income is always included. used to measure for-profit enterprises (Austin et al., 2006; Lerman and Parliament, 1991). It must be considered that co-operatives’ goals cannot be simply reduced to profit maximisation or economic and financial wealth, but are for the maximisation of benefit for their members or, in the case of social co-operatives, for the community (Mancino and Thomas, 2005; Thomas, 2004). As a result, any analysis ought to consider, for example, the difficulties in interpreting the economic profits of co-operatives due to member compensation. Indeed, profits often result in a ‘net zero surplus’ (Guzman and Arcas, 2008) because of the distribution of the gross income to members (Kyriakopoulos et al., 2004). Hence, appropriately adapted financial indicators can contribute to the interpretation of organisational efficiency but cannot be used to evaluate effectiveness (Herman and Renz, 1999). Starting from these premises, the World Co-operative Monitor aims to collect financial data (such as turnover, operating costs, total assets, equity, etc.3) useful for the definition of indicators for measuring the economic dimensions, efficiency, and level of capitalisation of co-operatives and mutuals. Turnover is defined as the income generated by the business activities conducted by a company, usually the sales of goods and services to customers. For the financial sector, drawing on the literature (Hahna and O’Brien, 2012; Maudos and Solís, 2009; Lileikiene and Likus, 2011; Andersen et al., 2012; Saunders and Schumacher, 2000; Demirgüç-Kunt et al., 2004; Ho and Saunders, 1981), the research team agreed to use the net interest income, understood as the difference between interest income and interest expenses as an indicator of turnover. Net interest income allows for the comparability of data at an international level, since it standardises parameters. In addition, an analysis conducted by the research team on a sample of co-operative banks’ annual reports from different parts of the world confirmed 3 The methodology for data collection Regarding the methodology used for the data collection, the purpose is to provide a new process of data integration and analysis, culminating in the creation of a regularly updated database containing not only economic data but also employee-related and other social data about the largest co-operatives worldwide. In selecting the tools for data collection, a dual strategy was pursued: i) defining an integration process to create a single database from existing databases and other data collected by national associations, research institutes, and other organisations, and ii) the development of a questionnaire used to collect data. With respect to the first strategy, in recent years, several federations and research centres have initiated national or sectorial plans for the systematic collection of economic data in order to publicise lists of the largest co-operatives at the national and sectorial levels. In addition, some private companies have developed regional databases that allow the capture of personal and economic data about co-operative organisations from across the world. From a methodological point of view, the acquisition of existing databases and rankings is instrumental to the pursuit of the second strategy. Although the existing databases are diverse in terms of population coverage and economic indicators, their integration provides a good starting point for the construction of a basic list of co-operatives to which the questionnaire can be addressed. The questionnaire is at the heart of the process of data collection. To facilitate its completion among diverse groups of people, the questionnaire is made available in Chinese, English, French, Greek, Portuguese, Spanish, and Turkish4, For the complete list of economic indicators and their definition please see www.monitor.coop 5 THE WORLD CO-OPERATIVE MONITOR: EXPLORING THE CO-OPERATIVE ECONOMY | REPORT 2014 in both online and PDF formats. The aim is to continue to increase the number of languages in which the questionnaire is distributed. Of these two paths, the integration of the existing databases presents fewer problems than the online questionnaire because of the interest and willingness shown by several federations and associations to work on the project in various countries that collect co-operative data. Online data collection presents the greater challenge, especially given the difficulty of reaching individual co-operatives and motivating them to subscribe to the notion that a greater availability and variety of data can not only lead to greater visibility but also, and more importantly, to a greater recognition of the importance of the co-operative sector. Despite these difficulties, the questionnaire has the greatest potential in the project. Data collected directly from the primary source makes it possible to collect a wider range of data than is available in existing databases. In addition, since definitions of the data are common and detailed, the economic and social data collected are robust and thus allow for a full comparison of co-operatives in different countries. Finally, the online questionnaire facilitates the collection of documents reporting the activities of the co-operative (annual, social, environmental reports, etc.), which is useful in the analysis performed to assess the impact of co-operative and mutual organisations. For the translations many thanks to Anne-Marie Merrien (IRECUS, Université de Sherbrooke), Karla Schlager and Manuel Mariño (ACI Americas the Alliance Regional Office), Antonina Guarrella (the Alliance), Professor Sigismundo Bialoskorski Neto (University of São Paulo at Ribeirão Preto), Bulent Temel - (Southern New Hampshire University and Atılım University), Jin Zhao (NCB) and Theo Benos (Maastricht University). 4 6 THE WORLD CO-OPERATIVE MONITOR: EXPLORING THE CO-OPERATIVE ECONOMY | REPORT 2014 THE WORLD CO-OPERATIVE MONITOR QUESTIONNAIRE The questionnaire can be completed online at www.monitor.coop Below is the list of information and indicators collected in the World Co-operative Monitor questionnaire. Data collection for the next report will ask for data from 2013. PART 1. GENERAL DATA ·· Profit (loss) for period ·· Organisation details (name, address, website, etc.) ·· Staff costs ·· Country ·· Equity ·· President ·· Sponsorships ·· Chief Executive Officer (CEO) ·· Donations ·· Organisation type (co-operative, mutuals, co-operative of co-operatives/mutuals, co-operative group, co-operative network, Non-co-operative enterprise) ·· Bursaries ·· Members remuneration ·· Co-operative type (worker, producer, consumer etc.) ·· Sector of activity PART 3. SOCIAL DATA ·· Number of members ·· Number of individual and organisation members PART 2. ECONOMIC DATA ·· Percentage of female and youth members ·· Turnover ·· Premium income ·· Percentage of co-operative, mutual, and other company members ·· Net interest income ·· Average number of employees ·· Non-interest income ·· Percentage of female, graduated and youth employees ·· Total assets ·· Number of volunteers ·· Total fixed assets ·· Number of elected officers ·· Total debts ·· Non-financial reports (social report, environmental report, sustainability report, integrated report, etc.) ·· Total operating costs ·· Costs of goods 7 THE WORLD CO-OPERATIVE MONITOR: EXPLORING THE CO-OPERATIVE ECONOMY | REPORT 2014 The World Co-operative Monitor is a project designed to monitor and demonstrate the economic and social impact of co-operatives and mutual organisations worldwide Done World Co-operative Monitor accomplishments to date: Use available economic data from country and sector lists, research centers, existing databases and surveys directly contributed by co-operatives in order to rank the largest co-operatives Goals Work towards an improved methodology for data collection and analysis of co-operatives worldwide Compile a database of economic and social data to give visibility to both the economic and social impact of the world’s co-operatives Strengthening the World Co-operative Monitor How Value How can you help us achieve these goals? What is the value of my contribution? Co-operatives can complete the survey online at www.monitor.coop Increase the global visibility of your co-operative and the overall movement Spread the word about the project and encourage others to participate Ensure more accurate data collection Create national or regional observatories on co-operatives based on the World Co-operative Monitor methodology Featured stories are selected from those co-operatives that complete the survey to learn more visit www.monitor.coop THE WORLD CO-OPERATIVE MONITOR: FINDINGS FOR 2012 entire database 16 that were not represented in the previous year: Congo, Costa Rica, Czech Republic, Dominican Republic, Estonia, Iran, Iceland, Israel, Kenya, Lithuania, Latvia, Morocco, Myanmar, Mongolia, Nepal, Pakistan, Paraguay, Russian Federation, and Slovakia. Given the greater availability of data for Europe, due both to existing rankings and the availability of the Amadeus database, the research team reports a possibly higher coverage of Europe than of the rest of the world. The future goal of the project is to ensure adequate coverage of all continents. Data collection During the course of 2013 the research team focused on consolidating the results achieved during the first two years of the project and on improving the process of data collection, integration and analysis. In terms of building a baseline database, the team’s efforts were concentrated on the process of integrating the existing national and sectorial rankings with the aim of broadening the database as much as possible from the outset. Data was included that derived from lists from nine different countries as well as from the insurance sector ranking published by ICMIF (International Cooperative and Mutual Insurance Federation), see Table 3 for list of sources. Additionally data from co-operatives with a total turnover in 2012 of over 100 million US dollars was extracted from the Amadeus - Bureau van Dijk database and included in the data set. In addition to the abovementioned data sources, co-operatives are invited to submit their data directly to the World Co-operative Monitor through the online survey, which is then integrated into the overall database. This direct data collection provides more robust data and it is the aim of the research team to increase the number of surveys received each year. Though the number of surveys collected during the first 5 months of 2014 is relatively small, the data represent 183 co-operatives from 50 countries (see Appendix 3 for the entire list). Overall, data was collected on 1,926 co-operatives from 65 countries with a total turnover of 2,623.1 billion USD. In the database this year we note an increase in co-operatives from Asia and Africa and count among the total countries in the The rankings In the following pages, summary data of the main co-operative sectors are analysed, and a list of the largest co-operatives in each individual sector is presented. Given the still limited availability of questionnaires, the rankings presented are purely economic in nature. In addition to rankings based on turnover, the rankings based on ratio turnover on the gross domestic product (GDP) per capita are also presented. The ratio turnover on GDP is not intended to compute the contribution of each co-operative to the national GDP, but it is a first attempt to relate the turnover of the co-operative to the wealth of the country in which it operates. GDP and the GDP per capita have in fact different meanings. The GDP is the overall output of all the final goods and services produced within a country during one year. The GDP per capita measures the purchasing power of an economy in an internationally comparable way. Therefore, the ratio turnover on GDP per capita measures 10 THE WORLD CO-OPERATIVE MONITOR: EXPLORING THE CO-OPERATIVE ECONOMY | REPORT 2014 the turnover of a co-operative in unit of the purchasing power of an economy, in an internationally comparable way. For the banking sector please note that local rankings integrated in the database use an indicator, which is similar to the net banking income and refers to the difference of the total interest income plus other banking incomes (i.e. dividends, net revenues for services, profits from financial transactions) and interest expenses plus other banking costs (i.e. fees and commissions, losses from financial transactions). Having said this, the research team was forced to rely on the net banking income as criterion for co-operative banks. This indicator, although it is not considered the best option for performance evaluation in the banking sector, allows for data comparability in light of the vision and purposes of the World Co-operative Monitor. Please also consider that values slightly vary from country to country owing to limitations in data collecting. The research team is aware of the limitations caused by the use of different indicators when comparing different types of co-operatives. For this reason, sectorial rankings are presented in this report. Comparisons among co-operatives in different sectors should be made with due caution, keeping in mind that the economic values presented are ordered according to different parameters. The results presented below are to be considered exploratory, not exhaustive. Results are presented by sector of activity. Note that there is no ranking for the “Other activities” sector due to the limited number of co-operatives pertaining to that category. If a cooperative carries out several activities, it has been classified in the main sector of activity. In the event a co-operative carries out several activities and has a consolidated balance sheet, the total is considered for the top 300 ranking. The classification proposed is to be considered as a first attempt that can be improved in future editions of the project. All values are expressed in US dollars. Conversion to US dollars is based on the exchange rates from 31 December, 2012. The list of countries is based on the United Nations’ ‘Standard Country or Area Codes for Statistical Use’ classification. Percentages are rounded to the nearest whole number; total percentage values may therefore not be equal to 100. 11 THE WORLD CO-OPERATIVE MONITOR: EXPLORING THE CO-OPERATIVE ECONOMY | REPORT 2014 T. 3 NATIONAL/SECTORIAL RANKINGS COLLECTED DURING 2014 Country List Organisation Criteria Colombia Desempeño Sector Cooperativo Colombiano 2012 Confecoop - Confederación de Cooperativas de Colombia (COLCoop) Ingresos Finland Co-operation in Finland Pellervo Society (Pellervo) Total revenues / Liikevaihto France Panorama sectoriel des entreprises coopératives et Top 100, édition 2014 Coop FR, les entreprises coopératives (CoopFR) Chiffre d'affaires Italy La Coop nel 2012 Coop Italia (CoopIT) Vendite lorde Japan JCCU - Top 10 Community Based Retail Co-ops in Japan Japanese Consumers' Cooperative Union (JCCU) Total Turnover Netherlands De 40 grootste coöperaties in de agribusiness NCR - Dutch Council for Cooperatives (NCR) Netto-omzet New Zealand New Zealand Cooperative and Mutual Top 40 Cooperative Business New Zealand (NZ.Coop) Revenue Spain Ranking de Empresas Relevantes de la Economía Social 2012 Confederación Empresarial Española de Economía Social (CEPES) Facturaciòn UK UK co-operative 100 Co-operatives UK Turnover USA NCB Co-op 100 National Consumer Cooperative Bank (NCB) Revenue ICMIF Global500 2012 ICMIF - International Cooperative and Mutual Insurance Federation Premiums 12 THE WORLD CO-OPERATIVE MONITOR: EXPLORING THE CO-OPERATIVE ECONOMY | REPORT 2014 THE WORLD CO-OPERATIVE MONITOR 2012 DATABASE 1,926 65 co-operatives countries billion USD (turnover in 2012) Total turnover in 2012 2,623.1 Turnover excluding banking 1,301.7 165.0 Total net banking income Total insurance co-ops and mutuals premium income 13 THE WORLD CO-OPERATIVE MONITOR: EXPLORING THE CO-OPERATIVE ECONOMY | REPORT 2014 1,156.5 F. 1 CO-OPERATIVES BY COUNTRY F. 2 CO-OPERATIVES BY SECTOR OF ACTIVITY 27% 27% 21% 8% Agriculture and food industries Insurance Wholesale and retail trade Industry and utilities 7% 5% 3% 2% Other services Banking and financial services Health and social care Other activities 14 THE WORLD CO-OPERATIVE MONITOR: EXPLORING THE CO-OPERATIVE ECONOMY | REPORT 2014 Over 100 million USD LOOKING AT THE CO-OPERATIVES WITH A TURNOVER OVER 100 MILLION USD billion USD 1,313 (turnover in 2012) co-operatives Across 50 countries Turnover 2,603.02 billion USD Turnover in 2012 (excluding banking and insurance sectors) Total net banking income Total insurance co-ops and mutuals premium income F. 3 CO-OPERATIVES WITH TURNOVER OF OVER 100 MILLION USD BY COUNTRY 15 THE WORLD CO-OPERATIVE MONITOR: EXPLORING THE CO-OPERATIVE ECONOMY | REPORT 2014 1,288.68 163.19 1,151.15 F. 4 CO-OPERATIVES WITH TURNOVER OF OVER 100 MILLION USD BY SECTOR OF ACTIVITY 24% 17% 17% 4% Insurance Agriculture and food industries Wholesale and retail trade Industry and utilities 3% 2% 1% 1% Other services Banking and financial services Health and social care Other activities T. 4 COUNTRIES BY TOTAL TURNOVER OF CO-OPERATIVES OVER 100 MILLION USD turnover (billion USD) turnover (billion USD) USA 669.86 BELGIUM 29.47 FRANCE 377.13 SWEDEN 26.61 JAPAN 360.54 AUSTRALIA 17.48 GERMANY 291.73 SINGAPORE 14.41 NETHERLANDS 132.56 BRAZIL 7.22 SPAIN 85.21 POLAND 5.46 UK 83.48 INDIA 5.07 SWITZERLAND 78.62 IRELAND 4.88 FINLAND 66.13 COLOMBIA 4.46 DENMARK 64.85 ARGENTINA 3.63 ITALY 54.92 CZECH REPUBLIC 2.31 SOUTH KOREA 54.44 MALAYSIA 1.98 CANADA 51.19 SAUDI ARABIA 1.50 NORWAY 33.35 TURKEY AUSTRIA 33.25 OTHER COUNTRIES 1.06 7.13 NEW ZEALAND 33.07 16 THE WORLD CO-OPERATIVE MONITOR: EXPLORING THE CO-OPERATIVE ECONOMY AGRICULTURE AND FOOD INDUSTRIES The agriculture and food industries group together all co-operatives that operate along the entire agricultural value chain, starting from the cultivation of agricultural products and livestock farming to the industrial processing of agricultural products and animals. This sector includes both agricultural producers’ co-operatives and consortia of co-operatives, or similar arrangements, to carry out the processing and marketing of agricultural goods for members. Overall, data was collected for 523 co-operatives distributed in 30 countries, with a total turnover in 2012 of 598.90 billion US dollars. F. 5 CO-OPERATIVES IN THE AGRICULTURE AND FOOD INDUSTRIES SECTOR BY COUNTRY 17 THE WORLD CO-OPERATIVE MONITOR: EXPLORING THE CO-OPERATIVE ECONOMY | REPORT 2014 Looking at the co-operatives with a turnover of over 100 million USD, there are 328 co-operatives distributed in 27 countries, with a total turnover of 591.64 billion US dollars. F. 6 CO-OPERATIVES WITH TURNOVER OF OVER 100 MILLION USD IN THE AGRICULTURE AND FOOD INDUSTRIES SECTOR BY COUNTRY 18 THE WORLD CO-OPERATIVE MONITOR: EXPLORING THE CO-OPERATIVE ECONOMY | REPORT 2014 T. 5 THE 30 LARGEST CO-OPERATIVES IN THE AGRICULTURE AND FOOD INDUSTRIES SECTOR BY TURNOVER RANK RANK 1 1 2 3 ZEN-NOH (NATIONAL FEDERATION OF AGRICULTURAL CO-OPERATIVES) NH NONGHYUP (FORMERLY NACF) 3 2 CHS INC. 4 4 5 6 2012 2011 ORGANISATION TURNOVER 2012 COUNTRY SOURCE (BILLION USD) Japan 56.85 Euricse South Korea 50.71 WCM questionnaire USA 40.60 WCM questionnaire FONTERRA COOPERATIVE GROUP New Zealand 16.26 NZ.coop 6 LAND O'LAKES, INC. USA 14.12 NCB 8 BAYWA GROUP Germany 13.90 Euricse 7 7 ROYAL FRIESLANDCAMPINA Netherlands 13.60 NCR 8 5 DAIRY FARMERS OF AMERICA USA 12.14 NCB 9 9 ARLA FOODS AMBA Denmark 11.16 Amadeus 10 10 LEVERANDØRSELSKABET DANISH CROWN AMBA Denmark 10.29 WCM questionnaire 11 11 GROWMARK, INC. USA 10.06 NCB 12 12 AGRAVIS RAIFFEISEN AG Germany 9.38 Euricse 13 13 SUEDZUCKER Germany 9.23 Euricse 14 - FORFARMERS GROUP Netherlands 8.66 NCR 15 15 DLG GROUP Denmark 8.59 Euricse 16 14 IN VIVO France 7.48 CoopFR 17 20 TEREOS France 6.65 CoopFR 18 21 TERRENA France 5.91 CoopFR 19 18 DMK DEUTSCHES MILCHKONTOR GMBH Germany 5.81 Euricse 20 - FLORAHOLLAND Netherlands 5.80 NCR 21 19 SODIAAL France 5.75 CoopFR 22 - LANTMÄNNEN Sweden 5.62 Euricse 23 22 VIVESCIA (CHAMPAGNE CÉRÉALES + NOURICIA) France 5.25 CoopFR WCM questionnaire 24 23 LA COOP FÉDÉRÉE Canada 4.98 25 25 AG PROCESSING INC. USA 4.92 NCB 26 - France 4.76 CoopFR 27 27 AGRIAL INDIAN FARMERS FERTILISER COOPERATIVE LIMITED (IFFCO) AXÉRÉAL India 4.65 WCM questionnaire France 4.49 CoopFR MFA USA 4.22 Euricse AGRICOLA TRE VALLI Italy 4.14 Euricse 28 24 29 - 30 28 TOTAL TURNOVER (BILLION USD) 19 THE WORLD CO-OPERATIVE MONITOR: EXPLORING THE CO-OPERATIVE ECONOMY | REPORT 2014 365.97 T. 6 THE 30 LARGEST CO-OPERATIVES IN THE AGRICULTURE AND FOOD INDUSTRIES SECTOR BY TURNOVER ON GDP PER CAPITA RANK RANK 1 2 TURNOVER /GDP PER CAPITA (2012) ORGANISATION COUNTRY 1 INDIAN FARMERS FERTILISER COOPERATIVE LIMITED (IFFCO) India 3,096,402.45 WCM questionnaire 2 NH NONGHYUP (FORMERLY NACF) South Korea 2,244,694.95 WCM questionnaire 3 3 ZEN-NOH (NATIONAL FEDERATION OF AGRICULTURAL CO-OPERATIVES) Japan 1,216,528.28 Euricse 4 4 CHS INC. USA 784,547.53 WCM questionnaire 5 5 FONTERRA COOPERATIVE GROUP New Zealand 420,892.81 NZ.coop 6 6 BAYWA GROUP Germany 326,212.33 Euricse 7 9 ROYAL FRIESLANDCAMPINA Netherlands 295,967.89 NCR 8 8 LAND O'LAKES, INC. USA 272,780.53 NCB 9 7 DAIRY FARMERS OF AMERICA USA 234,595.89 NCB 10 11 AGRAVIS RAIFFEISEN AG Germany 220,181.69 Euricse 2012 2011 SOURCE 11 13 SUEDZUCKER Germany 216,584.84 Euricse 12 16 ARLA FOODS Denmark 198,085.26 Amadeus 13 14 GROWMARK, INC. USA 194,343.57 NCB 14 - FORFARMERS GROUP Netherlands 188,392.79 NCR 15 15 IN VIVO France 188,233.03 CoopFR 16 18 LEVERANDØRSELSKABET DANISH CROWN Denmark 182,549.53 WCM questionnaire CoopFR 17 22 TEREOS France 167,218.65 18 27 DLG GROUP Denmark 152,318.57 Euricse 19 23 TERRENA France 148,660.93 CoopFR 20 20 SODIAAL France 144,743.56 CoopFR 21 21 DMK DEUTSCHES MILCHKONTOR Germany 136,294.81 Euricse 22 25 VIVESCIA France 132,194.69 CoopFR 23 - FLORAHOLLAND Netherlands 126,265.09 NCR 24 26 COOPERATIVA LECHERA COLANTA Colombia 123,367.12 COLCoop AGRICOLA TRE VALLI Italy 122,357.59 Euricse AGRIAL France 119,778.62 CoopFR CoopFR 25 29 26 - 27 30 AXÉRÉAL France 112,873.42 28 - LANTMÄNNEN Sweden 102,066.54 Euricse 29 - LA COOP FÉDÉRÉE Canada 97,322.77 WCM questionnaire 30 - AG PROCESSING INC. USA 95,075.11 NCB 20 THE WORLD CO-OPERATIVE MONITOR: EXPLORING THE CO-OPERATIVE ECONOMY | REPORT 2014 WHOLESALE AND RETAIL TRADE This sector includes co-operatives formed to purchase and supply goods and services at competitive conditions in the interest of members. Overall, data was collected for 405 co-operatives distributed in 37 countries, with a total turnover in 2012 of 563.86 billion US dollars. F. 7 CO-OPERATIVES IN THE WHOLESALE AND RETAIL TRADE SECTOR BY COUNTRY 21 THE WORLD CO-OPERATIVE MONITOR: EXPLORING THE CO-OPERATIVE ECONOMY | REPORT 2014 Looking at the co-operatives with a turnover of over 100 million USD, there are 330 co-operatives distributed in 33 countries, with a total turnover of 561.82 billion US dollars. F. 8 CO-OPERATIVES WITH TURNOVER OF OVER 100 MILLION USD IN THE WHOLESALE AND RETAIL TRADE SECTOR BY COUNTRY 22 THE WORLD CO-OPERATIVE MONITOR: EXPLORING THE CO-OPERATIVE ECONOMY | REPORT 2014 T. 7 THE 20 LARGEST CO-OPERATIVES IN THE WHOLESALE AND RETAIL TRADE SECTOR BY TURNOVER RANK RANK 1 TURNOVER 2012 ORGANISATION COUNTRY 2 ACDLEC - E.LECLERC France 57.66 CoopFR 2 1 REWE GROUP Germany 54.84 Euricse 3 3 EDEKA ZENTRALE Germany 41.83 Euricse 4 5 SYSTÈME U France 30.62 CoopFR 5 4 COOP SWISS Switzerland 29.21 Euricse 6 6 MIGROS Switzerland 27.31 Amadeus 7 7 THE CO-OPERATIVE GROUP LIMITED UK 22.16 Co-operatives UK 8 9 JOHN LEWIS PARTNERSHIP PLC UK 15.50 Co-operatives UK 9 8 SOK CORPORATION Finland 15.45 Pellervo 10 10 WAKEFERN FOOD CORP. USA 11.01 NCB 11 13 FEDERATED CO-OPERATIVES LIMITED Canada 8.83 Euricse 12 12 COÖPERATIEVE INKOOPVERENIGING SUPERUNIE B.A. Netherlands 8.56 Amadeus 13 11 GRUPO EROSKI Spain 8.21 CEPES 14 14 ASSOCIATED WHOLESALE GROCERS, INC USA 7.85 NCB 15 - COOP AMBA Denmark 7.16 Amadeus 16 - FENACO Switzerland 6.34 Amadeus 17 20 NOWEDA Germany 6.07 Euricse 18 15 ASTERA France 5.89 CoopFR 19 16 KOOPERATIVA FÖRBUNDET (KF) Sweden 5.82 Euricse 20 18 COOP NORGE Norway 5.57 Amadeus 2012 2011 SOURCE (BILLION USD) TOTAL TURNOVER (BILLION USD) 23 THE WORLD CO-OPERATIVE MONITOR: EXPLORING THE CO-OPERATIVE ECONOMY | REPORT 2014 375.90 T. 8 THE 20 LARGEST CO-OPERATIVES IN THE WHOLESALE AND RETAIL TRADE SECTOR BY TURNOVER ON GDP PER CAPITA RANK RANK 1 TURNOVER /GDP PER CAPITA (2012) ORGANISATION COUNTRY 2 ACDLEC - E.LECLERC France 1,450,755.42 CoopFR 2 1 REWE GROUP Germany 1,287,326.15 Euricse 3 3 EDEKA ZENTRALE Germany 981,942.14 Euricse 4 4 SYSTÈME U France 770,493.88 CoopFR 5 5 THE CO-OPERATIVE GROUP LIMITED UK 569,277.01 Co-operatives UK 6 7 JOHN LEWIS PARTNERSHIP PLC UK 398,301.88 Co-operatives UK 7 6 COOP SWISS Switzerland 370,039.02 Euricse 8 8 MIGROS Switzerland 346,060.06 Amadeus 9 9 SOK CORPORATION Finland 338,089.62 Pellervo 10 10 GRUPO EROSKI Spain 290,373.15 CEPES 11 11 WAKEFERN FOOD CORP. USA 212,759.54 NCB 12 12 COÖPERATIEVE INKOOPVERENIGING SUPERUNIE B.A. Netherlands 186,319.21 Amadeus 13 14 FEDERATED CO-OPERATIVES LIMITED Canada 172,518.73 Euricse 14 13 ASSOCIATED WHOLESALE GROCERS, INC USA 151,733.69 NCB 15 15 ASTERA France 148,129.76 CoopFR 16 18 NOWEDA Germany 142,440.47 Euricse 17 - COOP AMBA Denmark 127,114.00 Amadeus 18 17 SANACORP EG Germany 115,122.12 Amadeus 19 19 KOOPERATIVA FÖRBUNDET (KF) Sweden 105,769.06 Euricse 20 20 UNICOOP FIRENZE Italy 93,887.31 CoopIT 2012 2011 24 THE WORLD CO-OPERATIVE MONITOR: EXPLORING THE CO-OPERATIVE ECONOMY | REPORT 2014 SOURCE INDUSTRY AND UTILITIES This sector includes co-operatives surveyed by the World Co-operative Monitor operating in industrial sectors, with the exception of the food industry and utilities; that is, co-operatives that are active in the management of infrastructure for a public service, such as electricity, natural gas, and water. The industrial sector also includes worker co-operatives in the construction sector. Overall, data was collected for 154 co-operatives distributed in 18 countries, with a total turnover in 2012 of 85.01 billion US dollars. F. 9 CO-OPERATIVES IN THE INDUSTRY AND UTILITIES SECTOR BY COUNTRY 25 THE WORLD CO-OPERATIVE MONITOR: EXPLORING THE CO-OPERATIVE ECONOMY | REPORT 2014 Looking at the co-operatives with a turnover of over 100 million USD, there are 80 co-operatives distributed in 14 countries, with a total turnover of 83.81 billion US dollars. F. 10 CO-OPERATIVES WITH TURNOVER OF OVER 100 MILLION USD IN THE INDUSTRY AND UTILITIES SECTOR BY COUNTRY 26 THE WORLD CO-OPERATIVE MONITOR: EXPLORING THE CO-OPERATIVE ECONOMY | REPORT 2014 T. 9 THE 15 LARGEST CO-OPERATIVES IN THE INDUSTRY AND UTILITIES SECTOR BY TURNOVER RANK RANK 2011 ORGANISATION COUNTRY 1 1 MONDRAGON Spain 2 - METSÄ GROUP 3 2 4 2012 TURNOVER 2012 SOURCE (BILLION USD) 18.58 CEPES Finland 6.60 Pellervo COPERSUCAR Brazil 5.48 Euricse - ACE HARDWARE CORP. USA 3.83 NCB 5 - DO-IT-BEST CORP. USA 2.59 NCB 6 3 NATIONAL CABLE TELEVISION, INC. USA 2.34 Euricse 7 6 BASIN ELECTRIC POWER COOPERATIVE USA 1.92 NCB 8 7 EANDIS Belgium 1.74 Amadeus 9 4 CCC Italy 1.64 Euricse 10 8 OK A.M.B.A. Denmark 1.63 Amadeus 11 14 SACMI Italy 1.61 Euricse 12 - UNITED MERCHANTS PUBLIC LIMITED COMPANY UK 1.49 Co-operatives UK 13 5 FAGOR ELECTRODOMÉSTICOS Spain 1.42 CEPES 14 - TRUE VALUE CORPORATION USA 1.40 NCB 15 9 OGLETHORPE POWER CORPORATION USA 1.32 NCB TOTAL TURNOVER (BILLION USD) 27 THE WORLD CO-OPERATIVE MONITOR: EXPLORING THE CO-OPERATIVE ECONOMY | REPORT 2014 53.60 T. 10 THE 15 LARGEST CO-OPERATIVES IN THE INDUSTRY AND UTILITIES SECTOR BY TURNOVER ON GDP PER CAPITA TURNOVER /GDP PER CAPITA (2012) RANK RANK 2011 ORGANISATION COUNTRY 1 1 MONDRAGON Spain 657,143.09 CEPES 2 2 COPERSUCAR Brazil 483,348.57 Euricse 3 - METSÄ GROUP Finland 144,412.90 Pellervo 4 - ACE HARDWARE CORP. USA 74,069.69 NCB 5 3 FAGOR ELECTRODOMÉSTICOS Spain 50,318.28 CEPES 6 - DO-IT-BEST CORP. USA 50,030.38 NCB 7 4 CCC Italy 48,609.68 Euricse 8 8 SACMI Italy 47,557.34 Euricse 9 5 NATIONAL CABLE TELEVISION, INC. USA 45,192.89 Euricse 10 6 EANDIS Belgium 40,055.88 Amadeus 11 - UNITED MERCHANTS PUBLIC LIMITED COMPANY UK 38,280.20 Co-operatives UK 12 7 BASIN ELECTRIC POWER COOPERATIVE USA 37,083.16 NCB 13 12 OK A.M.B.A. Denmark 28,982.15 Amadeus 14 15 FAGOR EDERLAN Spain 27,217.23 CEPES 15 - TRUE VALUE CORPORATION USA 27,034.57 NCB 2012 28 THE WORLD CO-OPERATIVE MONITOR: EXPLORING THE CO-OPERATIVE ECONOMY | REPORT 2014 SOURCE HEALTH AND SOCIAL CARE This sector includes co-operatives that manage health, social, or educational services. The data presented below shows how information was collected across the world, especially in Europe and South America. Data was collected for 65 co-operatives distributed in 14 countries, with a total turnover in 2012 of 15.11 billion US dollars. F. 11 CO-OPERATIVES IN THE HEALTH AND SOCIAL CARE SECTOR BY COUNTRY 29 THE WORLD CO-OPERATIVE MONITOR: EXPLORING THE CO-OPERATIVE ECONOMY | REPORT 2014 Looking at the co-operatives with a turnover of over 100 million USD, there are 18 co-operatives distributed in 10 countries, with a total turnover of 14.22 billion US dollars. F. 12 CO-OPERATIVES WITH TURNOVER OF OVER 100 MILLION USD IN THE HEALTH AND SOCIAL CARE SECTOR BY COUNTRY 30 THE WORLD CO-OPERATIVE MONITOR: EXPLORING THE CO-OPERATIVE ECONOMY | REPORT 2014 T. 11 THE 10 LARGEST CO-OPERATIVES IN THE HEALTH AND SOCIAL CARE SECTOR BY TURNOVER RANK RANK 1 TURNOVER 2012 ORGANISATION COUNTRY 1 HEALTHPARTNERS INC. USA 3.98 NCB 2 2 GROUP HEALTH COOPERATIVE USA 3.63 NCB 3 3 FUNDACIÓN ESPRIU Spain 1.80 WCM questionnaire 4 - GROUPE WELCOOP France 1.21 CoopFR 5 7 CENTRAL NACIONAL UNIMED COOPERATIVA CENTRAL Brazil 0.90 WCM questionnaire 6 - SOUTHERN CROSS MEDICAL CARE SOCIETY New Zealand 0.54 NZ.coop 7 - INTERCOMMUNALE DE SANTE PUBLIQUE DU PAYS DE CHARLEROI Belgium 0.51 Amadeus 8 - COOPERATIVA DE SALUD Y DESARROLLO INTEGRAL ZONA SUR ORIENTAL DE CARTAGENA Colombia 0.33 COLCoop 9 - ASSOCIATION INTERCOMMUNALE DE SOINS ET D'HOSPITALISATION Belgium 0.19 Amadeus 10 - CENTRE HOSPITALIER UNIVERSITAIRE ET PSYCHIATRIQUE DE MONS-BORINAGE Belgium 0.19 Amadeus 2012 2011 SOURCE (BILLION USD) TOTAL TURNOVER (BILLION USD) 31 THE WORLD CO-OPERATIVE MONITOR: EXPLORING THE CO-OPERATIVE ECONOMY | REPORT 2014 13.29 T. 12 THE 10 LARGEST CO-OPERATIVES IN THE HEALTH AND SOCIAL CARE SECTOR BY TURNOVER ON GDP PER CAPITA RANK RANK 1 TURNOVER /GDP PER CAPITA (2012) ORGANISATION COUNTRY 6 CENTRAL NACIONAL UNIMED COOPERATIVA CENTRAL Brazil 79,691.04 WCM questionnaire 2 4 HEALTHPARTNERS INC. USA 76,813.73 NCB 3 5 GROUP HEALTH COOPERATIVE USA 70,127.55 NCB 4 7 FUNDACIÓN ESPRIU Spain 63,787.48 WCM questionnaire 5 - Colombia 42,757.00 COLCoop 6 - France 30,343.03 CoopFR 7 - Colombia 14,714.65 COLCoop 8 - New Zealand 14,104.71 NZ.coop 9 - Belgium 11,852.80 Amadeus 10 - Colombia 11,444.01 COLCoop 2012 2011 COOPERATIVA DE SALUD Y DESARROLLO INTEGRAL ZONA SUR ORIENTAL DE CARTAGENA GROUPE WELCOOP ENTIDAD COOPERATIVA SOLIDARIA DE SALUD DEL NORTE DE SOACHA - CONACOOP SOUTHERN CROSS MEDICAL CARE SOCIETY INTERCOMMUNALE DE SANTE PUBLIQUE DU PAYS DE CHARLEROI COOPERATIVA MEDICA DEL VALLE Y DE PROFESIONALES DE COLOMBIA - CONSUMO 32 THE WORLD CO-OPERATIVE MONITOR: EXPLORING THE CO-OPERATIVE ECONOMY | REPORT 2014 SOURCE OTHER SERVICES This category covers all co-operatives that provide services other than those included in health and social care, such as co-operative business services and transport. Data was collected for 130 co-operatives distributed in 23 countries, with a total turnover in 2012 of 22.96 billion US dollars. F. 13 CO-OPERATIVES IN THE OTHER SERVICES SECTOR BY COUNTRY 33 THE WORLD CO-OPERATIVE MONITOR: EXPLORING THE CO-OPERATIVE ECONOMY | REPORT 2014 Looking at the co-operatives with a turnover of over 100 million USD, there are 56 co-operatives distributed in 16 countries, with a total turnover of 21.57 billion US dollars. F. 14 CO-OPERATIVES WITH TURNOVER OF OVER 100 MILLION USD IN THE OTHER SERVICES SECTOR BY COUNTRY 34 THE WORLD CO-OPERATIVE MONITOR: EXPLORING THE CO-OPERATIVE ECONOMY | REPORT 2014 T. 13 THE 10 LARGEST CO-OPERATIVES IN THE OTHER SERVICES SECTOR BY TURNOVER RANK RANK ORGANISATION COUNTRY 1 1 GRUPO ASCES Spain 3.03 CEPES 2 8 SOCIETE INTERNATIONALE DE TELECOMMUNICATIONS AERONAUTIQUES Belgium 1.61 Amadeus 3 9 CAMST Italy 1.24 Euricse 4 3 DATEV EG Germany 1.02 Amadeus 5 - UNIPRO FOOD SERVICE, INC. USA 0.99 NCB 6 - COÖPERATIE PRICEWATERHOUSECOOPERS NEDERLAND U.A. Netherlands 0.91 Amadeus 7 - COÖPERATIE AVEBE U.A. Netherlands 0.81 Amadeus 8 7 CENTRALE DER WERKGEVERS AAN DE HAVEN VAN ANTWERPEN Belgium 0.71 Amadeus 9 4 GAD EG. Germany 0.70 Amadeus 10 6 CIR Italy 0.65 Euricse 2012 2011 TURNOVER 2012 (BILLION USD) TOTAL TURNOVER (BILLION USD) 35 THE WORLD CO-OPERATIVE MONITOR: EXPLORING THE CO-OPERATIVE ECONOMY | REPORT 2014 SOURCE 11.68 T. 14 THE 10 LARGEST CO-OPERATIVES IN THE OTHER SERVICES SECTOR BY TURNOVER ON GDP PER CAPITA RANK RANK ORGANISATION COUNTRY 1 1 GRUPO ASCES Spain 2 9 SOCIETE INTERNATIONALE DE TELECOMMUNICATIONS AERONAUTIQUES 3 6 4 2012 2011 TURNOVER /GDP PER CAPITA (2012) SOURCE 107,338.19 CEPES Belgium 37,103.51 Amadeus CAMST Italy 36,776.70 Euricse - SPÓŁDZIALNIA MIESZKANIOWA LOKATORSKO - WŁASNOİCIOWA OSIEDLE WIESZCZÓW W CZAPLINKU Poland 31,516.04 Amadeus 5 2 DATEV EG Germany 23,927.22 Amadeus 6 - Netherlands 19,905.21 Amadeus 7 4 CIR Italy 19,161.73 Euricse 8 - UNIPRO FOOD SERVICE, INC. USA 19,072.99 NCB 9 - Colombia 18,113.41 COLCoop 10 - Netherlands 17,651.91 Amadeus COÖPERATIE PRICEWATERHOUSECOOPERS NEDERLAND U.A. UNIVERSIDAD COOPERATIVA DE COLOMBIA CAFIHUILA LTDA COÖPERATIE AVEBE U.A. 36 THE WORLD CO-OPERATIVE MONITOR: EXPLORING THE CO-OPERATIVE ECONOMY | REPORT 2014 BANKING AND FINANCIAL SERVICES This sector includes co-operative banks and credit unions providing banking and financial intermediation services, democratically controlled by member customers (borrowers and depositors). Also included are credit unions and banks whose capital owners are composed of individuals without rights regarding the management of the bank or credit union. Overall, data was collected for 90 co-operative banks, credit unions, and other financial co-operatives distributed in 33 countries, with a total net banking income of 164.96 billion US dollars. F. 15 CO-OPERATIVES IN THE BANKING AND FINANCIAL SERVICES SECTOR BY COUNTRY 37 THE WORLD CO-OPERATIVE MONITOR: EXPLORING THE CO-OPERATIVE ECONOMY | REPORT 2014 Looking at the co-operatives with a net banking income of over 100 million USD, there are 33 co-operatives distributed in 18 countries, with 163.19 billion US dollars. F. 16 CO-OPERATIVES WITH NET BANKING INCOME OF OVER 100 MILLION USD IN THE BANKING AND FINANCIAL SERVICES SECTOR BY COUNTRY 38 THE WORLD CO-OPERATIVE MONITOR: EXPLORING THE CO-OPERATIVE ECONOMY | REPORT 2014 T. 15 THE 15 LARGEST CO-OPERATIVES IN THE BANKING AND FINANCIAL SERVICES SECTOR BY NET BANKING INCOME RANK RANK 1 INCOME 2012 ORGANISATION COUNTRY 1 GROUPE CRÉDIT AGRICOLE France 40.90 CoopFR 2 2 GROUPE BPCE France 28.96 CoopFR 3 3 GROUPE CRÉDIT MUTUEL France 19.26 CoopFR 4 5 RABOBANK GROUP Netherlands 15.04 WCM questionnaire 5 4 DESJARDINS GROUP Canada 12.57 WCM questionnaire 6 - THE NORINCHUKIN BANK Japan 11.19 Euricse 7 6 FEDERAL FARM CREDIT BANKS FUNDING CORPORATION USA 6.48 Euricse 8 7 RZB Austria 4.66 Euricse 9 8 DZ BANK Germany 4.30 Euricse 10 10 NAVY FEDERAL CREDIT UNION USA 3.65 NCB 11 12 SWISS UNION OF RAIFFEISEN BANKS Switzerland 2.29 Euricse 12 11 OP-POHJOLA GROUP Finland 2.23 Pellervo 13 9 AGRIBANK, FCB USA 1.56 NCB 14 13 COBANK USA 1.24 WCM questionnaire 15 - STATE EMPLOYEES CREDIT UNION, INC. USA 0.95 NCB 2012 2011 SOURCE (BILLION USD) TOTAL NET BANKING INCOME (BILLION USD) 39 THE WORLD CO-OPERATIVE MONITOR: EXPLORING THE CO-OPERATIVE ECONOMY | REPORT 2014 155.28 T. 16 THE 15 LARGEST CO-OPERATIVES IN THE BANKING AND FINANCIAL SERVICES SECTOR BY NET BANKING INCOME ON GDP PER CAPITA RANK RANK 1 INCOME/GDP PER CAPITA (2012) ORGANISATION COUNTRY 1 GROUPE CRÉDIT AGRICOLE France 1,029,140.00 CoopFR 2 2 GROUPE BPCE France 728,564.73 CoopFR 3 3 GROUPE CRÉDIT MUTUEL France 484,691.74 CoopFR 4 5 RABOBANK GROUP Netherlands 327,261.42 WCM questionnaire 5 4 DESJARDINS GROUP Canada 245,460.52 WCM questionnaire 6 - THE NORINCHUKIN BANK Japan 239,527.16 Euricse 7 - Kenya 167,351.15 Euricse 8 6 USA 125,162.90 Euricse 9 8 DZ BANK Germany 100,982.06 Euricse 10 7 RZB Austria 99,572.07 Euricse 11 10 NAVY FEDERAL CREDIT UNION USA 70,552.69 NCB 12 - Poland 66,135.73 WCM questionnaire 13 - 50,071.22 WCM questionnaire 14 15 2012 2011 THE CO-OPERATIVE BANK OF KENYA LIMITED AND SUBSIDIARIES FEDERAL FARM CREDIT BANKS FUNDING CORPORATION NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF COOPERATIVE SAVINGS AND CREDIT UNIONS (NACSCU) SOURCE COOPERATIVA NACIONAL DE SERVICIOS Dominican MÚLTIPLES DE LOS MAESTROS, INC. (COOPNAMA) Republic 11 OP-POHJOLA GROUP Finland 48,830.68 Pellervo 9 AGRIBANK, FCB USA 30,145.77 NCB 40 THE WORLD CO-OPERATIVE MONITOR: EXPLORING THE CO-OPERATIVE ECONOMY | REPORT 2014 INSURANCE CO-OPERATIVES AND MUTUALS This section is dedicated to mutual organisations and co-operatives owned and democratically controlled by their insured customers. These entities enable members to obtain insurance policies at more favourable conditions than those available on the open market. Overall, data was collected for 518 insurance co-operatives and mutuals distributed in 43 countries, with a total premium income in 2012 of 1156.48 billion US dollars. F. 17 INSURANCE CO-OPERATIVES AND MUTUALS BY COUNTRY 41 THE WORLD CO-OPERATIVE MONITOR: EXPLORING THE CO-OPERATIVE ECONOMY | REPORT 2014 Looking at the co-operatives with a premium income of over 100 million USD, there are 452 insurance co-operatives and mutuals distributed in 39 countries, with a total premium income of 1151.15 billion US dollars. F. 18 INSURANCE CO-OPERATIVES AND MUTUALS WITH PREMIUM INCOME OF OVER 100 MILLION USD BY COUNTRY 42 THE WORLD CO-OPERATIVE MONITOR: EXPLORING THE CO-OPERATIVE ECONOMY | REPORT 2014 T. 17 THE 15 LARGEST INSURANCE CO-OPERATIVES AND MUTUALS BY PREMIUM INCOME PREMIUM INCOME 2012 (BILLION USD) SOURCE Japan 77.61 WCM questionnaire NIPPON LIFE Japan 64.62 ICMIF 4 MEIJI YASUDA LIFE Japan 62.41 ICMIF 4 3 STATE FARM USA 58.28 ICMIF 5 5 KAISER PERMANENTE USA 50.60 ICMIF 6 6 SUMITOMO LIFE Japan 31.19 ICMIF 7 8 LIBERTY MUTUAL USA 30.19 ICMIF 8 7 NATIONWIDE USA 28.33 ICMIF 9 10 MAPFRE Spain 27.73 ICMIF 10 9 ACHMEA Netherlands 26.27 ICMIF 11 11 NEW YORK LIFE USA 22.35 ICMIF 12 - MASSMUTUAL FINANCIAL USA 21.51 ICMIF 13 14 FARMERS INSURANCE GROUP USA 19.25 ICMIF 14 12 COVÉA France 19.03 ICMIF 15 - NORTHWESTERN MUTUAL USA 16.18 ICMIF RANK RANK 2011 ORGANISATION COUNTRY 1 1 ZENKYOREN 2 2 3 2012 TOTAL PREMIUM INCOME (BILLION USD) 43 THE WORLD CO-OPERATIVE MONITOR: EXPLORING THE CO-OPERATIVE ECONOMY | REPORT 2014 555.54 T. 18 THE 15 LARGEST INSURANCE CO-OPERATIVES AND MUTUALS BY PREMIUM INCOME ON GDP PER CAPITA PREMIUM INCOME/GDP PER CAPITA (2012) RANK RANK 2011 ORGANISATION COUNTRY 1 1 ZENKYOREN Japan 1,660,822.04 WCM questionnaire 2 2 NIPPON LIFE Japan 1,382,907.91 ICMIF 3 4 MEIJI YASUDA LIFE Japan 1,335,442.57 ICMIF 4 3 STATE FARM USA 1,126,293.97 ICMIF 5 6 MAPFRE Spain 980,620.39 ICMIF 6 5 KAISER PERMANENTE USA 977,804.96 ICMIF 7 7 SUMITOMO LIFE Japan 667,419.97 ICMIF 8 9 LIBERTY MUTUAL USA 583,390.86 ICMIF 9 10 ACHMEA Netherlands 571,535.67 ICMIF 10 8 NATIONWIDE USA 547,451.82 ICMIF 11 12 COVÉA France 478,888.56 ICMIF 12 - UNIPOL Italy 444,507.14 ICMIF 13 11 NEW YORK LIFE USA 431,831.85 ICMIF 14 - MASSMUTUAL FINANCIAL USA 415,664.95 ICMIF 15 14 FARMERS INSURANCE GROUP USA 371,915.23 ICMIF 2012 44 THE WORLD CO-OPERATIVE MONITOR: EXPLORING THE CO-OPERATIVE ECONOMY | REPORT 2014 SOURCE TOP 300 USING THE WORLD CO-OPERATIVE MONITOR DATA TO IDENTIFY THE TOP 300 CO-OPERATIVE AND MUTUAL ORGANISATIONS As mentioned previously, the Alliance - with the support of Euricse - aims to create a system to monitor, over time, the economic performance of the largest co-operatives in the world, along with other important aspects, such as employees, number of user services, and types of services offered. An interesting exercise will be now performed: applying the Global300 methodology to data collected by the World Co-operative Monitor in an effort to identify the top 300 co-operatives and mutuals in terms of revenue (Appendix 1) and in terms of revenue on GDP per capita (Appendix 2). Results of this exercise have to be considered carefully; varying economic indicators have been used for different types of organisations (net banking income for banks, premium income for insurance co-operatives and mutuals, and turnover for other co-operatives). TOP300 Top 300 co-operative and mutual organisations by turnover billion USD 26 (turnover in 2012) countries Turnover (excluding banking and insurance sectors) Total net banking income 2,205.7 Turnover in 2012 billion USD Total insurance co-ops and mutuals premium income 45 THE WORLD CO-OPERATIVE MONITOR: EXPLORING THE CO-OPERATIVE ECONOMY | REPORT 2014 1,028.3 153.1 1,024.3 TOP300 Top 300 co-operative and mutual organisations by turnover BY TURNOVER F. 19 TOP 300 CO-OPERATIVE AND MUTUAL ORGANISATIONS BY SECTOR 41% 27% 20% Insurance co-operatives and mutuals Agriculture and food industries Wholesale and retail trade 5% 4% Industry and utilities Banking and financial services 1% Health and social care F. 20 TOP 300 CO-OPERATIVE AND MUTUAL ORGANISATIONS BY COUNTRY 46 THE WORLD CO-OPERATIVE MONITOR: EXPLORING THE CO-OPERATIVE ECONOMY | REPORT 2014 1% Other activities 1% Other services TOP300 Top 300 co-operative and mutual organisations by turnover on GDP per capita BY TURNOVER ON GDP PER CAPITA F. 21 TOP 300 CO-OPERATIVE AND MUTUAL ORGANISATIONS BY SECTOR BY TURNOVER ON GDP PER CAPITA 41% 26% 21% 5% 4% Insurance co-operatives and mutuals Agriculture and food industries Wholesale and retail trade Banking and financial services Industry and utilities 1% Health and social care 1% Other activities 1% Other services F. 22 TOP 300 CO-OPERATIVE AND MUTUAL ORGANISATIONS BY TURNOVER ON GDP PER CAPITA BY COUNTRY 47 THE WORLD CO-OPERATIVE MONITOR: EXPLORING THE CO-OPERATIVE ECONOMY | REPORT 2014 WCM INTERVIEW TALKING WITH THE INTERNATIONAL LABOUR ORGANIZATION (ILO): THE IMPORTANCE OF STATISTICS ON CO-OPERATIVES We spoke with Simel Esim (ILO COOP) and Theo Sparreboom (ILO STAT) about the importance of collecting statistics on co-operatives. Why is it important to collect statistics on co-operatives? What is the current state of data collection on co-operatives and what are the plans for the future? Paragraph 8 of the Recommendation 193 concerning the Promotion of Cooperatives encourages governments to ensure that national policies “seek to improve national statistics on cooperatives with a view to the formulation and implementation of development policies”. Statistics on cooperatives are essential to quantify and analyse the impact they have on their owner-members and on the economy as a whole. They can provide evidence on, for example, how co-operatives fare in comparison with other economic units throughout economic cycles, and with respect to employment and income. Statistics on co-operatives also help to better understand how different business models impact on communities and workers, which is a topic of growing interest. At the 19th International Conference of Labour Statisticians (ICLS) held in Geneva in October 2013, governments, workers’ and employers’ representatives reaffirmed the importance of having more comprehensive and (internationally) comparable statistics on co-operatives. It is worth mentioning that a specific item on statistics on cooperatives was included in the 2013 ICLS agenda for the first time in its history. The ILO was advised by the delegates to carry out further developmental work on the measurement of co-operatives through administrative registers or establishment or household surveys, and to introduce the topic for more indepth discussion at the forthcoming 20th ICLS (scheduled for 2018). Important statistics on co-operatives relate to the number and characteristics of co-operatives, of members of co-operatives, of workers employed in co-operatives and the value added of co-operatives. Although work has been carried out in many countries, particularly as regards the development of national cooperative registers, complete and disaggregated statistics on co-operatives are often unavailable, including at the international level. The session at the ICLS in 2013 provided an opportunity to share experiences on the current production of statistics on co-operatives, as well as on the challenges faced in many countries regarding the coverage, completeness and up-todateness of available information. The ICLS adopted a Resolution concerning further work on statistics of co-operatives, and several country representatives expressed their interest in sharing more details of their experiences, and to participate in pilot exercises to test new or modified measurement approaches (including, for example, Argentina, Iran, Moldova and Ukraine). The Resolution recommends that the Office, in cooperation with the ILO’s constituents and interested national statistical offices, carry out further developmental work on the measurement of co-operatives through administrative registers, establishment or household surveys. 48 THE WORLD CO-OPERATIVE MONITOR: EXPLORING THE CO-OPERATIVE ECONOMY | REPORT 2014 The Cooperatives Unit of the ILO (COOP) was established in 1920 in recognition of the role of co-operatives in employment creation and their contribution to the achievement of social justice. The ILO, being concerned not only with the conditions of work but also with the conditions of workers, considered that the organizational form of co-operatives was of particular interest in this regard. Within the UN system, the ILO is the only organization to have a general, explicit mandate to work on co-operatives through its COOP Unit. Located in the ILO’s Enterprises Department, COOP contributes to the overall ILO mission of creating decent work for all through the promotion of sustainable enterprises of all types and sizes. Within this broad mandate, it is responsible for ILO's work on job creation and growth through cooperative enterprise development including applied research, policy advocacy and advisory services, technical cooperation and partnerships. Of particular importance is the implementation of the ILO Recommendation concerning Promotion of Co-operatives (R193) through advisory services on legal provisions and policies at the national and international levels. SIMEL ESIM, the head of the International Labour Office’s Cooperatives Unit, is a Turkish-American political economist, who has worked in social and economic development for the past 25 years. Ms. Esim holds a Ph.D. in economics and has worked on gender equality, informal economy, labor migration and enterprise development issues. THEO SPARREBOOM is Senior Labour Economist in the Statistics Department of the International Labour Office in Geneva. Prior to joining the ILO in Geneva, he worked for many years in sub-Saharan Africa and Asia. He holds a PhD in economics from Erasmus University in Rotterdam, The Netherlands, and has an extensive publication record on labour market information and statistics. FOR FURTHER INFORMATION The text of Recommendation 193 is available at www.ilo.org On the impact of different business models see for example the presentations of the conference on Tools to Measure Co-operative Performance and Impact hosted by the Centre of Excellence in Accounting and Reporting for Co-operatives (CEARC) and the Measuring the Co-operative Difference Research Network in Halifax, May 2014, available at www.smu.ca 19th International Conference of Labour Statisticians: Room Document 6, presentation and report available at www.ilo.org 49 THE WORLD CO-OPERATIVE MONITOR: EXPLORING THE CO-OPERATIVE ECONOMY | REPORT 2014 The Jardins of Desjardins NAME DESJARDINS GROUP Banking and financial services WHERE Canada ABSOLUTE TURNOVER (CANADIAN) 5,126,000,000 IN 2012 2012 RANKINGS EMPLOYEES MEMBERS 44,942 5,641,217 BANKING AND FINANCIAL SERVICES SECTOR 5TH BY NET BANKING INCOME AND 5TH BY NET BANKING INCOME ON GDP PER CAPITA. IN TOP 300 RANKINGS 41 BY TURNOVER AND 50 BY TURNOVER ON GDP PER CAPITA. WWW.DESJARDINS.COM Tomatoes on the roof, ferns on the walls… The Desjardins Group, Canada’s leading co-operative financial group and the fifth largest in the world, is taking the principle of sustainability to heart and introducing groundbreaking environmental initiatives at all levels – literally. The roof of a bank might be one of the last places you’d expect to find an urban food garden. But the Caisse Populaire Desjardins du Mont-Royal, in downtown Montreal, is topped by a lush, brightly coloured mosaic: 30 kinds of fruits, vegetables, herbs and flowers, grown in Biotop gardening modules, including aubergines, chillies, basil and marigolds. The garden has environmental advantages, contributing to the bank’s carbon-neutral target, and community benefits, since the produce is given to local people. Meanwhile, in Lévis, across the river from Quebec City, the Desjardins Group’s new headquarters features office space for 1,450 employees and the world’s tallest indoor vertical garden, a green wall of 11,000 plants reaching 65 metres high. Elkhorn ferns, philodendrons and pollutant-eliminating peace lilies are just some of the 42 species growing hydroponically in panels made from recycled water bottles and plastic bags. “The employees are very proud of the living wall,” says Pauline D’Amboise, Vice-President for Governance, Social Responsibility and Secretariat General for the Desjardins Group. “Sustainability is part of our DNA.” The Desjardins Group’s co-operative identity and on-going commitment to community values have been essential to developing its current engagement with sustainability. The Caisse Populaire de Lévis, North America’s first savings and credit co-operative, was founded by Alphonse Desjardins and his wife Dorimène in 1900. They wanted to fight against usury, democratize access to credit, promote savings and economic education and support local development. The Desjardins Group continued to develop after Alphonse’s death, with hundreds more caisses founded. Insurance products were introduced and subsidiaries were later acquired or created in the fields of trust, mutual funds, industrial credit, investment, securities and assets management. Today, the Desjardins Group has over 6 million members and clients, C$223billion in total assets and 864 service outlets and 376 caisses in Quebec and Ontario, plus 400 establishments offering services outside the caisse network and more than 20 entities and business units providing a large range of financial and insurance services. Active in 30 developing and emerging countries through 50 THE WORLD CO-OPERATIVE MONITOR: EXPLORING THE CO-OPERATIVE ECONOMY behind the data Développement International Desjardins, the group also gives back C$1 million every day to members and communities through scholarships, sponsorships, donations and its non-profit foundation. Performance and social responsibility can clearly go together: in 2014, Bloomberg named Desjardins the strongest bank in North America, and number two in the world. In the past decade, the group’s on-going commitment to community development has been joined by an engagement with environmental sustainability, with the living wall in Lévis just one of the more evident signs. “We established a sustainable development policy as early as 2005,” explains Suzanne Gendron, Managing Vice-President for Cooperation and Corporate Affairs. As well as favouring socially responsible investment, such as financing renewable energy projects, the Desjardins Group also offers a range of green products for its customers, like loans to businesses to help them reduce energy consumption, a special rate for insurance for eco-friendly cars and a programme that encourages green home building and renovations. The group has also come up with a list of actions to help it become sustainable in the way it runs its business, from encouraging ethical purchasing and redistributing surplus food left over from functions to facilitating the use of alternative transportation by its 45,000-plus employees. “We encourage employees to use car pools, public transport, bikes, electric cars,” says Pauline. “We have safe areas to park bikes at the buildings, beautiful showers – it’s like a hotel!” Suzanne believes that the group’s co-operative structure has made it easier to introduce this move towards sustainability. “As a co-operative, we’re not looking just at short-term profits, but at the long-term impact of everything we do,” she says. “Whatever decision we make, we make it for our communities in the long term, so it’s normal to be investing in education, environment, cooperation, sustainable finance, microfinance. We know in the long term it will pay off and be in the best interest of our members. That’s why we School Trips to the Slaughterhouse NAME LEVERANDØRSELSKABET DANISH CROWN AMBA Agriculture and food industries WHERE Denmark ABSOLUTE TURNOVER (DANISH KRONE DKK) 58,164,000,000 IN 2012 2012 RANKINGS EMPLOYEES MEMBERS 23,000 8,552 AGRICULTURE AND FOOD INDUSTRIES SECTOR 10TH BY TURNOVER AND 16TH BY TURNOVER ON GDP PER CAPITA. IN TOP 300 RANKINGS 52 BY TURNOVER, 62 BY TURNOVER ON GDP PER CAPITA. WWW.DANISHCROWN.DK One of Denmark’s popular attractions, visited by 250,000 since it opened in 2005, is not a historic site or a museum, but a slaughterhouse where 100,000 pigs are killed every week. Politicians, agriculture ministers and members of the European Parliament are among the visitors, but so too are local associations, pensioners and school groups. The slaughterhouse has a long history. The first Danish co-operative slaughterhouse was opened in Horsens, on Denmark’s east coast, in 1887. Over the next half-century, many other co-operative pig slaughterhouses were set up, and from 1970 to 2002, over 60 smaller co-operatives merged to make the present co-operative, Leverandørselskabet Danish Crown AmbA, which owns Danish Crown and has 8,500 members, all Danish livestock farmers. Danish Crown produces and markets pork and beef, and has a large number of subsidiaries around the world. In Denmark, co-operative members supply the live animals, while in other countries they are bought from local farmers or produced by the group itself. Europe’s largest pig-slaughtering business and meat processing company, it has 22,500 employees and sells in over 130 countries worldwide. The co-operative form has contributed to this growth. “During its many years of development, it ensured a strong, consistent and competitive supply chain from the farmer to the final customer worldwide, with small transaction costs and a focus on optimization of the entire value chain instead of sub-segments,” explains Svend Erik Sørensen, Senior Advisor to the CEO and Board and until recently Vice-President for Strategic Planning and Development. The form of co-operative applied by Danish Crown has also made it financially effective, he says, with built-in solidity coming from the members’ obligation to supply and the retaining of profit in the company during the year. He believes the uniqueness of Danish Crown of a co-operative – the world’s largest exporter of pork and one of the largest meat groups in the world – has come from its focus on being a business, and not in any sense a political organization, unlike many other co-operatives. “This understanding has been in place at both ends of the value chain right from the start in 1887,” he says. “Decisions are based on business cases, not on political thinking.” The opening of Horsens to the public, however, fits in perfectly with the principles of transparency and education that often define co-operatives. Danish Crown 52 THE WORLD CO-OPERATIVE MONITOR: EXPLORING THE CO-OPERATIVE ECONOMY | REPORT 2014 Take a virtual tour of the Horsens slaughterhouse: http://www.danishcrown.com/Danish-Crown/Welcome-tothe-virtual-slaughterhouse.aspx behind the data slaughters 75% of Denmark’s pigs, and Horsens is “the jewel in the crown” of its network of slaughterhouses. “We chose from the start to use it as a window for the public,” says Svend Erik. “Slaughter can be considered controversial, but we do things in a way we are proud to show to the public. It’s been a huge success.” Visitors come with prejudices but leave satisfied with what they’ve seen, he says. The co-operative has worked closely with the Danish Meat Research Institute (DMRI) to develop animal-handling systems based on studies of animal behaviour, seeking to minimize stress for the animals. “Pigs are not comfortable walking downwards, but prefer to walk upwards,” says Svend Erik. “So we built sloping floors so the pigs are always walking up, so movement becomes much easier.” With funding from Danish pig farmers, many of whom are co-operative members, the DMRI also developed a unique stunning system based on knocking the pigs unconscious with carbon dioxide before slaughtering. This Danish development is now sold worldwide, says Svend Erik. Though Horsens is a showcase, much of its technology, including robotics and animal-handling systems, has spread to Danish Crown’s other slaughterhouses. Soon the public will also be able to see how cattle are killed, not just pigs. A new cattle slaughterhouse featuring the latest technology and visitor facilities is already operational, and will be opened to the public this year. Svend Erik says these major infrastructural investments were made with the full support from the co-operative’s members. “Making a strategic investment was also safeguarding their future business.” He said the initiative to have Horsens open to the public came from the members. “They really felt they have something they were proud of and wanted to show the public.” An Innovative Example of Social Tourism NAME CITTÀ SO.LA.RE. SOC. COOP. SOCIALE A R.L. Health and social care (work integration) WHERE Italy ABSOLUTE TURNOVER 3,050,152 € IN 2012 EMPLOYEES MEMBERS VOLUNTEERS 59 71 26 WWW.CITTASOLARE.ORG In Italy, where social co-operatives have long played a key role in filling the gaps left exposed by dwindling public services, the Città Solare is pioneering an innovative form of social tourism, bringing together the disadvantaged in need of training and employment, the marginalized in need of accommodation and tourists and travelers looking for a good-value place to stay in Italy’s Veneto region. The name Città Solare, meaning “Sunny City”, comes from so.la.re., solidarietà, lavoro, responsabilità (“solidarity, work, responsibility”). Founded in Padua in 1997, it is dedicated to the social integration and employment of Italians and immigrants through various activities in three main areas: environmental services, industrial manufacturing and hospitality. The co-operative employs around 40 socially disadvantaged people to provide environmental services to public authorities and businesses. These include recycling collection, waste transport, recycling depot management, small building and environmental maintenance works – collecting used cooking oil, emptying bins of donated clothing for the charity Caritas and cutting grass, for example. Meanwhile, at a 400-square-metre facility in an industrial zone just outside of Padua, five to six people work on industrial manufacturing for other companies in the mechanical, electromechanical and oleo-pneumatic sectors. Currently they are assembling electric window controls for Renault cars. The third sector in which Città Solare is active, and perhaps the most unusual, is the management of hotels and hostels. Maurizio Trabuio, the co-operative’s president, explains more. “We’ve created the brand Casa a Colori [“House of Colours”] which we use to identify the hotel service dedicated to social tourism and the housing crisis.” Currently the co-operative runs the Casa a Colori in Padua; Casa Valentini Terrani in Padua, a few tram stops from the historic centre; Casa a Colori in Dolo, near Venice; and the Ostello a Colori in Mira, affiliated with AIG International, which links hostels around the world. In total they have more than 220 beds, and around 20 people are employed in reception, cleaning, commercial services and maintenance. At the Casa a Colori Dolo, a carefully renovated 17th-century convent, a restaurant was opened last year, Osteria del Frate dalla Manica Larga – literally, the Tavern of the Wide-Sleeved Friar, also offering training to the socially disadvantaged, and bigoli pasta with duck ragù and asparagus risotto to the public. The hotels offer not only reasonably priced rooms for short- or medium-term 54 THE WORLD CO-OPERATIVE MONITOR: EXPLORING THE CO-OPERATIVE ECONOMY behind the data stays for people travelling for work, tourism, study, medical care and cultural or sporting events, and create employment and work inclusion, but also offer temporary accommodation to marginalized people. For example, in April 2014, 50 refugees from Syria, Nigeria, Mali, Eritrea and Ethiopia arrived in Padua after being picked up by the Italian military’s Mare Nostrum operation to rescue migrants attempting the perilous journey across the Mediterranean from the African coast. A number were temporarily housed in the Casa a Colori and Casa Valentini Terrani in Padua. “For visitors to the hotels, the diversity comes from the encounter with many other groups of people – refugees, people who have been evicted from their homes, released convicts, recovering alcoholics, immigrants – who they might never normally meet, but who represent an interesting life experience,” says Trabuio. “We think this combination of social tourism and the housing crisis is unique. It allows us to offer a social service at advantageous prices, and to offer a form of sustainable, conscious and educational tourism in a globalized context, from a perspective of sustainability that does not depend on public spending but lives off the tourism market.” The Città Solare wants to spread a new idea of travelling: a shift from a consumerist, super-fast tourism to tourism that is aware, responsible, accessible and social. The co-operative wants to encourage the development of a model of sustainable tourism in its widest sense, a model that guarantees equal rights and opportunities to all people, including the weakest of society. The co-operative’s next project will build on the success of the Casa a Colori in Padua, expanding it to create a multifunctional service centre, Qui, which it hopes can be replicated in other urban locations. The traditional areas for tourists and social reception will be joined by co working spaces, restaurants, sport facilities and performance spaces, plus bike-sharing and car-sharing schemes, an urban vegetable garden and children’s areas. Says Trabuio: “We want to create a sustainable hub, able to respond to new urban and social needs, transforming the neighbourhood into a little model of an intelligent city.” Bringing Rural Development Through a Multipurpose System NAME NH NONGHYUP (FORMERLY NACF) Agriculture and food industries WHERE Korea ABSOLUTE TURNOVER (KOREAN WON) 56,341,741,000,000 IN 2012 2012 RANKINGS EMPLOYEES MEMBERS 109,465 2,445,120 AGRICULTURE AND FOOD INDUSTRIES SECTOR 2ND BY TURNOVER AND 2ND BY TURNOVER ON GDP PER CAPITA. IN TOP 300 RANKINGS 8TH BY TURNOVER, 2ND BY TURNOVER ON GDP PER CAPITA. WWW.NONGHYUP.COM Half a century ago, South Korea was one of the poorest countries in the world, with rural life particularly harsh. In the aftermath of the Korean War, devastated communities were suffering from chronic food shortages. A government-led push created an agricultural co-operative system to revive the rural economy, eradicate poverty and improve the socio-economic status of farmers. As part of this process, the government created the National Agricultural Co-operative Federation (NACF) in 1961, uniting the Agricultural Bank and the existing agricultural co-operatives. Since then, the NACF, known as Nonghyup in Korea, has played a crucial role in the development of the Korean economy and the modernization of agriculture and rural communities. Now South Korea is one of the world’s wealthiest nations, a modern economic and cultural powerhouse. As Korean pop culture grows in popularity around Asia and the rest of the world (the “Korean wave”) and electronics brands like LG and Samsung dominate the global sector, the NACF has also grown to become a hugely successful co-operative. According to last year’s World Co-operative Monitor, it is the world’s third-largest agricultural co-operative. The Korean agricultural co-operative system has a unique diversity of activities, including banking, insurance, agricultural marketing and extension services. This multipurpose system was initially adopted to support Korean farmers because small-scale, diversified farming was the norm, with the average farm covering barely one hectare. The success of agricultural co-operatives in the country is based partly on their multipurpose nature, bringing credit unions and consumer co-operatives to rural communities and facilitating rural development. Reflecting this, the NACF is a multipurpose co-operative with four main business divisions: agricultural marketing and supply, livestock marketing and supply, banking and insurance, and the extension service, which offers guidance. Following a restructuring in 2012, the NACF now serves its members and customers through 27 subsidiaries and two affiliate organizations. It represents 2.44 million individual members from 1,165 member co-operatives: more than 80% of all the Korean farmers. The agricultural marketing and supply business is the most essential of NACF’s services, as it directly involves ensuring higher returns and benefits to member farmers. For example, in the 1990s, to cope with changes following market liberalization and increased foreign imports, the NACF opened the discount 56 THE WORLD CO-OPERATIVE MONITOR: EXPLORING THE CO-OPERATIVE ECONOMY behind the data warehouse supermarket chain Hanaro Club, selling mainly Korean farm products. The introduction of this direct sale system between producers and customers allowed retail prices to fall, while still paying farmers fairly. Now, over half of all the agricultural products in South Korea are shipped by the NACF and its member co-operatives in the production area, while 20% of all the agricultural products sold in the consumption area are channeled by the NACF and its member co-operatives. The NACF’s banking business (NH Bank) serves 19.3 million customers with 43.9 million bank accounts, while member co-operatives provide banking services to 27.7 million customers with 77.8 million bank accounts. Considering 36.7 million overlapping customers, approximately 70% of the national population is currently using the NH Bank or its member co-operatives. This extensive client base is derived from diverse banking services including private banking, retail banking, corporate banking, insurance, credit cards, mutual credit and, most of all, convenient nationwide branches. These are particularly needed in rural areas underserved by commercial banks. The extension service conducts varied activities that contribute to representing farmers’ interests and rights, supporting their welfare and promoting cultural activities. It also engages in research and development on new technologies in the agricultural field. Through exchange programmes between urban and rural communities and its “I Love Farm” campaign supporting the coexistence of cities and farms, it also contributes to the balanced development of the national economy. The challenge for NACF in the future will be to remain true to its identity as a co-operative organization, while ensuring greater competitiveness for its members in an economic system dominated by the investor-owned model. Japanese Health and Welfare Co-operative Federation (HeW CO-OP㻌 JAPAN) Promoting Health Board member and Inclusion Michiko NAKAJIMA in an Aging Population NAME JAPANESE HEALTH AND WELFARE CO-OPERATIVE FEDERATION Health and social care WHERE Japan ABSOLUTE TURNOVER (JAPAN YEN) 1,900,000,000 € IN 2012 EMPLOYEES MEMBERS 23 2,835,000 HTTP://WWW.HEW.COOP/ENGLISH/ Japan is the world’s oldest country: in 2012, more than 24% of the population were aged 65 or over. This demographic trend is bringing significant public health and welfare challenges, but health co-operatives are leading the way in promoting preventative healthcare and encouraging social inclusion within communities. The Japanese Health and Welfare Co-operative Federation (HeW Co-op Japan) was founded in 1957, not long after the Second World War, because, says managing director Hiroki Tokubo, “of injustice for life and health. Many could not access medical care because of poverty, living in the countryside or disaster.” HeW was initially a department of the Japanese Consumer’s Co-operative Union (JCCU), but became independent in 2010 and now has 112 member societies, including the JCCU itself. It works to network together Japan’s medical and welfare co-operatives, share knowledge, recruit and nurture medical and welfare staff, produce publications and coordinate the bulk purchasing of medical supplies. The federation has a total membership of over 2.8 million, with 2,000 doctors and 12,000 nurses working in its members’ 77 hospitals. The federation’s mission of helping those who might struggle to access good medical care has not changed over the past half century. “Vulnerable groups, like elderly and needy people, are sometimes left behind,” says Hiroki. “HeW and its members are struggling to fill those gaps.” For example, when the east coast of Japan was devastated by a 9.0-magnitude earthquake followed by a powerful tsunami in March 2011, HeW Co-op Japan asked its member co-operatives nationwide to send doctors and nurses to a hub hospital in severely affected Miyagi. After the first three weeks of emergency assistance, HeW co-operatives sent the medical staff to support the evacuation centres in each prefecture. Support services included providing mental-health support and health checks for the evacuees. On a more regular, day-to-day basis, the health co-operatives are working to keep their members and the rest of the community healthy, using a participation model unique to Japan. Japanese consumer co-operatives have established a method of member participation based on small neighbourhood groups called han. In HeW’s co-operatives, three or more members can organize a han group, which carries out self-checking activities such as blood pressure, urine and fat testing, with the collaboration of medical specialists. There are 30,000 hans in health and welfare 58 THE WORLD CO-OPERATIVE MONITOR: EXPLORING THE CO-OPERATIVE ECONOMY behind the data co-operatives around Japan, with 240,000 members. Members are also encouraged to participate in voluntary activities, for example helping people in need in hospitals, organizing gatherings for elderly people who live on their own or promoting healthy ways of life. One of HeW’s members, Saitama Co-operative, is located in Saitama prefecture, north of Tokyo, the most rapidly aging area nationwide and also the area with the lowest density of physicians. The co-operative runs 33 facilities, including four hospitals, and has 242,098 members. Saitama’s members are particularly active in bringing health promotion to the community through voluntary activities. Co-operative members are responsible for all the decisionmaking for activity plans, and they design and implement events themselves. For World Health Organization (WHO) World Health Day, they went out on the streets to measure blood pressure and body fat, while for WHO No Tobacco Day co-operative members, together with doctors and nurses, again took to the streets to conduct questionnaires and provide advice on quitting smoking. Co-operative members also organize free activities like walking, exercising, dancing and yoga in public facilities and parks, with over 500 events every month. The majority of participants are aged between 50 and 70. Network building across generations is an important element of the co-operative members’ activities. They plan and organize community programmes, hosting events like tea parties with homemade food, handicraft workshops and singing and game sessions in their own houses or public places, with the aim of preventing social isolation and developing a stronger community. They also run activities based on the WHO concept of Age-Friendly Cities, conveying residents’ voices to the local government. Their achievements include having a wheelchairaccessible underground passageway built. With estimates claiming that by 2060, 40% of Japan’s population will be aged 65 or over, the activities of HeW co-operative members can only become increasingly important. Pulling Nigerians Out of Poverty NAME DE PARACH MULTIPURPOSE CO-OPERATIVE SOCIETY LIMITED Agriculture and food industries WHERE Nigeria NAIRA (NGN) 1,082,785 IN 2012 EMPLOYEES MEMBERS VOLUNTEERS 0 39 42 FACEBOOK.COM/DEPARACHMULTIPURPOSE.COOP Nigeria, the “Giant of Africa”, has the continent’s largest population and economy, now worth over $500 billion thanks in large part to its oil reserves. This wealth, however, has not stopped 60% of Nigerians living in extreme poverty, nor youth unemployment being close to 80%. Peter Obiorah, president of the De Parach Multipurpose Co-operative Society, thinks agriculture can offer answers to the country’s problems. “With agriculture, poverty and hunger will be a thing of the past among Nigerian youths,” he says. “Agriculture will reduce mass youth unemployment and involvement in crime, giving Nigerian youths opportunities for success and greatness, more than in the oil sector. With agriculture, they can discover their potential and preserve our country and its environment.” Unfortunately, the farming sector in Nigeria faces a number of deep-rooted challenges, not least an image problem. “Young people feel that farming is for the dropouts or ne’er-do-wells in society and a profession for poor people,” says Peter. “Farmers are believed to be low class. Young people prefer whitecollar jobs where they can dress impressively.” On top of this are financing issues, land tenure problems, substandard infrastructure and transport, a lack of good storage and processing facilities, rampant smuggling, inadequate tools and machinery, little training, ill-equipped extension workers, poor marketing channels and expensive inputs, like improved seeds and fertilizers. Though still small, the De Parach co-operative is working to address as many of these issues as possible. Founded in 2012, the co-operative was fully registered in March 2013, and currently has 255 members, including 137 young people who do not have the economic stability to contribute financially to the co-operative but who are given free membership. The co-operative’s mission is to promote agriculture among the youth of Nigeria, in order to boost their economic status and self-reliance, and also to assist women with little or no income, especially single mothers and widows, through its empowerment programmes. The main areas of activity are education (running training sessions and business management programmes), credit access (providing small loans to help members start businesses) and marketing (helping members gain market knowledge and sell their products). Since it was formed, among its many achievements, De Parach has helped young people and single mothers establish poultry farms, attend agricultural college, gain practical ICT skills and access agricultural inputs at affordable prices. Peter tells the story of one of the co-operative’s members, Mrs Nnenna Ann 60 THE WORLD CO-OPERATIVE MONITOR: EXPLORING THE CO-OPERATIVE ECONOMY behind the data Eguatu, who was widowed when her husband, a bus driver, was killed in a road accident in January 2012. She was left to bring up their two children, aged 4 and 6, on her own. “After the burial of her late husband, the situation became very hard,” he says. “She continued struggling, selling water sachets along the street in order to feed herself and her two kids, who weren’t attending school. Then in May 2013 she came to our office. She was able to register as a member of the co-operative but was not able to buy any share capital which would have enabled her to access a loan.” “But when she told us her story, we had no option but to help her and her kids. Due to our financial instability, we were only able to raise 20,000 naira ($122) to lend her. She started initially by buying cassava from farmers and processing it into garri to sell. Then later she began to sell yam, dried cassava chips, yellow and white maize flour and wheat flour. Today she is doing very well in the business, and her two kids are now in school.” Funding is the co-operative’s biggest challenge. “Since the co-operative was founded, we have not received any funding,” says Peter. Efforts to attract funding have ended in disappointment, and the interest rates on loans from commercial banks are too high. So far all the funding has come from member contributions. But, says Peter, “even though we have a very weak financial base from which to boost our activities and have been frustrated by our inability to secure funds, whenever I see Mrs Eguatu and the others who have received similar help from us, especially youths, I always feel fulfilled.” Bread and Co-operatives NAME COOPERATIVA OBRERA LIMITADA DE CONSUMO Y VIVIENDA Wholesale and retail trade WHERE Argentina ABSOLUTE TURNOVER (ARGENTINIAN PESOS) 2,668,919,605 IN 2012 2012 RANKINGS EMPLOYEES MEMBERS 2.712 1.238.791 IN TOP 300 RANKINGS 226TH BY TURNOVER ON GDP PER CAPITA One Sunday evening in spring 1920, 173 workers in the Argentine city of Bahía Blanca decided to form a co-operative to combat the growing spread of bakery cartels. Since then, the Cooperativa Obrera (“workers’ co-operative”) has grown to become the largest consumer co-operative in Argentina and the second-largest in Latin America, with 107 stores in 52 cities, 4,400 employees and more than 1,300,000 members. The co-operative’s founders were mostly railroad workers who wanted to reduce the price of bread, a vital staple in the family diet. Should they rent a bakery in order to immediately begin producing their own bread, or look to the future and build their own? In the end, they opted to build their own bakery, which opened on 1 May, 1922. The pioneers went on to open a warehouse, expanding their ability to regulate the prices of other family essentials. In 1936, the co-operative set up its first store outside Bahía Blanca, and continued to expand in scope and geographic reach over the following decades, weathering the economic crises in the 1950s and late 1990s. Since its beginnings, Cooperativa Obrera has followed a policy of social responsibility, opening stores in underserved areas, facilitating membership and using products to improve consumer health. In a hugely concentrated retail sector (six retailers have 80% of the market share), the co-operative has managed to carve out 2.7% of national market share, even though it has stores in just four provinces, and is not present in large cities. According to Mariano Glas, the co-operative’s Supermarket Manager, society needs to understand that “the co-operative sector is not a marginal sector, we are enterprises of people, not capital. Our most important role is to serve our members, not just generate profit.” Cooperativa Obrera’s supermarkets are mainly located in towns where the average population is less than 50,000, where services are needed. The co-operative looks for new locations on the basis of requests from residents, municipal authorities and unions, and in recent years from small supermarket owners whose ability to stay afloat has been threatened by difficult market conditions. Cooperativa Obrera enters into 40-year concession agreements with these small supermarkets. The owners receive an initial payment and then a percentage of the supermarket’s turnover on a monthly basis, ensuring a permanent source of income for their families, and employment continuity for their staff. WWW.COOPERATIVAOBRERA.COOP 62 THE WORLD CO-OPERATIVE MONITOR: EXPLORING THE CO-OPERATIVE ECONOMY behind the data Since 2005, the co-operative has also been carrying out a sustained campaign to increase membership, and 98.3% of sales are now to members. The membership process has been so simplified that all consumers have to do is present their national ID at any cash register and pay 1 peso (US$0.12) as initial capital. Members benefit from advantages like promotions and reduced prices. The co-operative’s surplus is distributed to its members, in proportion to purchases made. In 2014, 1,317,623 members received a total refund of 84,522,417 million pesos (US$10,358,000). Members can also participate at no cost in the various educational, cultural and recreational activities organized by the co-operative. “The co-operative’s social and cultural activities put into practice its status as a social enterprise,” says Mariano, “demonstrating that the distribution of food in the hands of consumers, through a consumer co-operative, is highly beneficial to the whole community.” The supermarket has developed its own brands, providing a range of basic items of high quality at competitive prices. Most of the products are produced by Argentine companies, so the brands support the domestic economy, and the co-operative also helps small and medium producers, giving them the opportunity to sell their products through the stores or through the creation of their own brands. Local producers are particularly favoured for the supply of fruits and vegetables. The co-operative runs campaigns to encourage the consumption of five different colours of fruits and vegetables every day, and has also developed a series of functional foods to help improve consumer health. Cooperativa Obrera currently has 46 products in its Ecoop line, which follow public health policies and the World Health Organization guidelines. The line includes higholeic sunflower oil, with similar properties to olive oil but five times cheaper, and, coming full circle from the cooperative’s origins as a railroad-worker-run bakery, “Pan Ecoop”, Argentina’s first bread fortified with Omega 3, 6 and 9 fatty acids and phytosterols, distributed at the same price as ordinary bread. APPENDIX 1 SECTOR OF ACTIVITY 1 ZENKYOREN Japan 77.61 Insurance WCM questionnaire 2 3 NIPPON LIFE Japan 64.62 Insurance ICMIF 3 6 MEIJI YASUDA LIFE Japan 62.41 Insurance ICMIF 4 4 STATE FARM GROUP USA 58.28 Insurance ICMIF 5 7 ACDLEC - E.LECLERC France 57.66 Wholesale and retail CoopFR 6 2 ZEN-NOH (NATIONAL FEDERATION OF AGRICULTURAL CO-OPERATIVES) Japan 56.85 Agriculture and food Euricse 7 5 REWE GROUP Germany 54.84 Wholesale and retail Euricse 8 12 NH NONGHYUP (FORMERLY NACF) South Korea 50.71 Agriculture and food WCM questionnaire 9 8 KAISER PERMANENTE USA 50.60 Insurance 10 13 EDEKA ZENTRALE Germany 41.83 Wholesale and retail Euricse 11 9 GROUPE CRÉDIT AGRICOLE France 40.90 Banking and financial services CoopFR 12 11 CHS INC. USA 40.60 Agriculture and food SOURCE COUNTRY 64 THE WORLD CO-OPERATIVE MONITOR: EXPLORING THE CO-OPERATIVE ECONOMY | REPORT 2014 INDICATOR RANKING 2011 1 ORGANISATION RANKING 2012 TURNOVER 2012 (BILLION USD) THE 300 LARGEST CO-OPERATIVE AND MUTUAL ORGANISATIONS BY TURNOVER ICMIF WCM questionnaire BI = Net banking income // PI = premium income 13 10 SUMITOMO LIFE Japan 31.19 Insurance 14 18 SYSTÈME U France 30.62 Wholesale and retail 15 17 LIBERTY MUTUAL USA 30.19 Insurance 16 15 COOP SWISS Switzerland 29.21 Wholesale and retail Euricse 17 14 GROUPE BPCE France 28.96 Banking and financial services CoopFR 18 16 NATIONWIDE USA 28.33 Insurance ICMIF 19 20 MAPFRE Spain 27.73 Insurance ICMIF 20 21 MIGROS-GENOSSENSCAFTS-BUND Switzerland 27.31 Wholesale and retail 21 19 ACHMEA Netherlands 26.27 Insurance ICMIF 22 22 NEW YORK LIFE USA 22.35 Insurance ICMIF 23 23 THE CO-OPERATIVE GROUP LIMITED UK 22.16 Wholesale and retail 24 32 MASSMUTUAL FINANCIAL USA 21.51 Insurance 25 28 GROUPE CRÉDIT MUTUEL France 19.26 Banking and financial services 26 27 FARMERS INSURANCE GROUP USA 19.25 Insurance ICMIF 27 24 COVÉA France 19.03 Insurance ICMIF 28 26 MONDRAGON Spain 18.58 Industry 29 30 FONTERRA COOPERATIVE GROUP New Zealand 16.26 Agriculture and food 30 31 NORTHWESTERN MUTUAL USA 16.18 Insurance 31 39 JOHN LEWIS PARTNERSHIP PLC UK 15.50 Wholesale and retail 32 34 USAA GROUP USA 15.47 Insurance 33 33 SOK CORPORATION Finland 15.45 Wholesale and retail 34 29 R+V VERSICHERUNG Germany 15.26 Insurance 65 THE WORLD CO-OPERATIVE MONITOR: EXPLORING THE CO-OPERATIVE ECONOMY | REPORT 2014 ICMIF CoopFR ICMIF Amadeus Co-operatives UK ICMIF CoopFR CEPES NZ.coop ICMIF Co-operatives UK ICMIF Pellervo ICMIF // T = turnover TURNOVER 2012 (BILLION USD) Netherlands 15.04 Banking and financial services 36 44 UNIPOL Italy 15.03 Insurance 37 38 LAND O'LAKES, INC. USA 14.12 Agriculture and food NCB 38 41 BAYWA GROUP Germany 13.90 Agriculture and food Euricse 39 25 GROUPAMA France 13.83 Insurance 40 40 ROYAL FRIESLANDCAMPINA Netherlands 13.60 Agriculture and food 41 37 DESJARDINS GROUP Canada 12.57 Banking and financial services 42 36 HDI Germany 12.46 Insurance ICMIF 43 42 VIENNA INSURANCE GROUP Austria 12.44 Insurance ICMIF 44 35 DAIRY FARMERS OF AMERICA USA 12.14 Agriculture and food 45 43 DEBEKA VERSICHERN Germany 12.03 Insurance 46 - THE NORINCHUKIN BANK Japan 11.19 Banking and financial services 47 50 ARLA FOODS AMBA Denmark 11.16 Agriculture and food Amadeus 48 49 WAKEFERN FOOD CORP. USA 11.01 Wholesale and retail NCB 49 48 BUPA UK 10.95 Insurance ICMIF 50 46 AG2R LA MONDIALE France 10.85 Insurance ICMIF 51 47 TIAA GROUP USA 10.79 Insurance ICMIF 52 51 LEVERANDØRSELSKABET DANISH CROWN AMBA Denmark 10.29 Agriculture and food WCM questionnaire 53 53 GROWMARK, INC. USA 10.06 Agriculture and food NCB 54 54 AGRAVIS RAIFFEISEN AG Germany 9.38 Agriculture and food Euricse 55 - SINGAPORE NATIONAL CO-OPERATIVE FEDERATION Singapore 9.37 Other activities 56 59 SUEDZUCKER Germany 9.23 Agriculture and food SOURCE COUNTRY 66 THE WORLD CO-OPERATIVE MONITOR: EXPLORING THE CO-OPERATIVE ECONOMY | REPORT 2014 INDICATOR RABOBANK GROUP SECTOR OF ACTIVITY RANKING 2011 45 ORGANISATION RANKING 2012 35 WCM questionnaire ICMIF ICMIF NCR WCM questionnaire NCB ICMIF Euricse WCM questionnaire Euricse BI = Net banking income // PI = premium income 57 64 PACIFIC LIFE USA 8.85 Insurance 58 58 FEDERATED CO-OPERATIVES LIMITED Canada 8.83 Wholesale and retail 59 56 GUARDIAN LIFE USA 8.83 Insurance 60 - FORFARMERS GROUP Netherlands 8.66 Agriculture and food NCR 61 69 DLG GROUP Denmark 8.59 Agriculture and food Euricse 62 55 COÖPERATIEVE INKOOPVERENIGING SUPERUNIE B.A. Netherlands 8.56 Wholesale and retail Amadeus 63 52 GRUPO EROSKI Spain 8.21 Wholesale and retail CEPES 64 61 CZ GROEP Netherlands 7.99 Insurance 65 62 ASSOCIATED WHOLESALE GROCERS, INC USA 7.85 Wholesale and retail NCB 66 67 IN VIVO France 7.48 Agriculture and food CoopFR 67 - COOP AMBA Denmark 7.16 Wholesale and retail Amadeus 68 66 HUK-COBURG Germany 7.16 Insurance ICMIF 69 65 UNIQA Austria 7.12 Insurance ICMIF 70 68 NATIONAL FEDERATION OF WORKERS AND CONSUMERS INSURANCE COOPERATIVES (ZENROSAI) Japan 7.11 Insurance ICMIF 71 57 FUKOKU LIFE Japan 7.10 Insurance ICMIF 72 63 SIGNAL IDUNA Germany 7.08 Insurance ICMIF 73 60 MACIF France 7.02 Insurance ICMIF 74 81 TEREOS France 6.65 Agriculture and food CoopFR 75 70 METSÄ GROUP Finland 6.60 Industry Pellervo 76 72 FJCC Japan 6.51 Insurance 77 74 FEDERAL FARM CREDIT BANKS FUNDING CORPORATION USA 6.48 Banking and financial services 78 75 FENACO Switzerland 6.34 Wholesale and retail 67 THE WORLD CO-OPERATIVE MONITOR: EXPLORING THE CO-OPERATIVE ECONOMY | REPORT 2014 ICMIF Euricse ICMIF ICMIF ICMIF Euricse Amadeus // T = turnover TURNOVER 2012 (BILLION USD) USA 6.16 Insurance ICMIF 80 71 ASAHI LIFE Japan 6.09 Insurance ICMIF 81 101 NOWEDA EG Germany 6.07 Wholesale and retail Euricse 82 82 TERRENA France 5.91 Agriculture and food CoopFR 83 79 ASTERA France 5.89 Wholesale and retail CoopFR 84 85 KOOPERATIVA FÖRBUNDET (KF) Sweden 5.82 Wholesale and retail Euricse 85 76 DMK DEUTSCHES MILCHKONTOR GMBH Germany 5.81 Agriculture and food Euricse 86 - FLORAHOLLAND Netherlands 5.80 Agriculture and food NCR 87 80 SODIAAL France 5.75 Agriculture and food CoopFR 88 263 LANTMÄNNEN Sweden 5.62 Agriculture and food Euricse 89 95 COOP NORGE SA Norway 5.57 Wholesale and retail Amadeus 90 83 ROYAL LONDON UK 5.54 Insurance 91 107 COPERSUCAR Brazil 5.48 Industry 92 88 AUTO-OWNERS INSURANCE USA 5.48 Insurance ICMIF 93 84 VARMA MUTUAL PENSION Finland 5.44 Insurance ICMIF 94 73 MENZIS Netherlands 5.36 Insurance ICMIF 95 102 SECURIAN FINANCIAL USA 5.28 Insurance ICMIF 96 92 VIVESCIA (CHAMPAGNE CÉRÉALES + NOURICIA) France 5.25 Agriculture and food 97 97 MUTUAL OF OMAHA USA 5.24 Insurance ICMIF 98 96 THRIVENT FINANCIAL FOR LUTHERANS USA 5.18 Insurance ICMIF 99 90 ILMARINEN MUTUAL PENSION Finland 5.16 Insurance ICMIF 100 115 KLP Norway 5.14 Insurance ICMIF 101 - GOTHAER VERSICHERUNGEN Germany 5.02 Insurance ICMIF SOURCE COUNTRY 68 THE WORLD CO-OPERATIVE MONITOR: EXPLORING THE CO-OPERATIVE ECONOMY | REPORT 2014 INDICATOR AMERICAN FAMILY INSURANCE SECTOR OF ACTIVITY RANKING 2011 77 ORGANISATION RANKING 2012 79 ICMIF Euricse CoopFR BI = Net banking income // PI = premium income 102 105 LA COOP FÉDÉRÉE Canada 4.98 Agriculture and food 103 114 OLD REPUBLIC INTERNATIONAL CORPORATION USA 4.97 Insurance 104 109 AG PROCESSING INC. USA 4.92 Agriculture and food NCB 105 100 SANACORP EG Germany 4.90 Wholesale and retail Amadeus 106 106 ERIE INSURANCE USA 4.80 Insurance ICMIF 107 98 LÄNSFÖRSÄKRINGAR Sweden 4.78 Insurance ICMIF 108 129 AGRIAL France 4.76 Agriculture and food CoopFR 109 103 RZB Austria 4.66 Banking and financial services Euricse 110 116 INDIAN FARMERS FERTILISER COOPERATIVE LIMITED (IFFCO) India 4.65 Agriculture and food 111 89 CATTOLICA ASSICURAZIONI Italy 4.55 Insurance ICMIF 112 104 ALTE LEIPZIGER Germany 4.53 Insurance ICMIF 113 108 AXÉRÉAL France 4.49 Agriculture and food 114 99 REALE MUTUA Italy 4.45 Insurance ICMIF 115 93 SNS REAAL NV Netherlands 4.44 Insurance ICMIF 116 91 JAPANESE CONSUMERS' COOPERATIVE UNION Japan 4.34 Wholesale and retail 117 113 LV UK 4.30 Insurance 118 112 DZ BANK Germany 4.30 Banking and financial services Euricse 119 296 MFA USA 4.22 Agriculture and food Euricse 120 120 AGRICOLA TRE VALLI Italy 4.14 Agriculture and food Euricse 121 118 HEALTHPARTNERS INC. USA 3.98 Health and social care 122 110 MAIF France 3.91 Insurance ICMIF 123 178 OHIO NATIONAL LIFE USA 3.83 Insurance ICMIF 69 THE WORLD CO-OPERATIVE MONITOR: EXPLORING THE CO-OPERATIVE ECONOMY | REPORT 2014 WCM questionnaire Euricse WCM questionnaire CoopFR WCM questionnaire ICMIF NCB // T = turnover TURNOVER 2012 (BILLION USD) USA 3.83 Industry NCB 125 119 UNIFIED GROCERS, INC USA 3.80 Wholesale and retail NCB 126 169 FOLKSAM Sweden 3.78 Insurance ICMIF 127 117 ALECTA Sweden 3.72 Insurance ICMIF 128 146 PFA PENSION Denmark 3.71 Insurance ICMIF 129 78 NATIXIS ASSURANCES France 3.70 Insurance ICMIF 130 127 AGROPUR COOPÉRATIVE Canada 3.68 Agriculture and food 131 141 NAVY FEDERAL CREDIT UNION USA 3.65 Banking and financial services NCB 132 130 GROUP HEALTH COOPERATIVE USA 3.63 Health and social care NCB 133 121 LVM VERSICHERUNG Germany 3.62 Insurance ICMIF 134 131 LOCALTAPIOLA Finland 3.57 Insurance ICMIF 135 140 TINE SA Norway 3.55 Agriculture and food 136 144 FM GLOBAL USA 3.54 Insurance ICMIF 137 126 SWISS MOBILIAR Switzerland 3.52 Insurance ICMIF 138 - SELECTOUR AFAT France 3.46 Wholesale and retail CoopFR 139 147 NORTURA SA Norway 3.45 Agriculture and food Amadeus 140 138 GJENSIDIGE FORSIKRING Norway 3.40 Insurance ICMIF 141 257 MUTUA MADRILEÑA Spain 3.40 Insurance ICMIF 142 - ONEAMERICA GROUP USA 3.40 Insurance ICMIF 143 125 ETHIAS Belgium 3.37 Insurance ICMIF 144 - HKSCAN OYJ Finland 3.36 Agriculture and food Pellervo 145 149 RWZ Germany 3.34 Agriculture and food Euricse SOURCE COUNTRY 70 THE WORLD CO-OPERATIVE MONITOR: EXPLORING THE CO-OPERATIVE ECONOMY | REPORT 2014 INDICATOR ACE HARDWARE CORP. SECTOR OF ACTIVITY RANKING 2011 122 ORGANISATION RANKING 2012 124 Euricse WCM questionnaire BI = Net banking income // PI = premium income 146 157 WESTFLEISCH EG Germany 3.29 Agriculture and food Amadeus 147 154 EMMI Switzerland 3.26 Agriculture and food Euricse 148 123 CALIFORNIA DAIRIES, INC. USA 3.24 Agriculture and food NCB 149 151 AGRIFIRM Netherlands 3.21 Agriculture and food NCR 150 153 CO-OPERATIVE BULK HANDLING LIMITED Australia 3.21 Agriculture and food WCM questionnaire 151 145 CITIZENS PROPERTY INSURANCE CORP USA 3.18 Insurance 152 137 UNICOOP FIRENZE Italy 3.17 Wholesale and retail CoopIT 153 196 PAC 2000 Italy 3.17 Wholesale and retail Euricse 154 160 DANISH AGRO A.M.B.A Denmark 3.11 Wholesale and retail Amadeus 155 142 DIE CONTINENTALE Germany 3.07 Insurance ICMIF 156 143 VHV VERSICHERUNGEN Germany 3.05 Insurance ICMIF 157 173 SSQ FINANCIAL GROUP Canada 3.05 Insurance ICMIF 158 133 COOP SAPPORO Japan 3.04 Wholesale and retail 159 152 GRUPO ASCES Spain 3.03 Other services 160 158 TRISKALIA France 3.03 Agriculture and food 161 156 THE CO-OPERATORS Canada 3.01 Insurance 162 163 FOODSTUFFS (AUCKLAND) New Zealand 2.99 Wholesale and retail 163 150 SMABTP France 2.94 Insurance ICMIF 164 159 COUNTRY FINANCIAL USA 2.92 Insurance ICMIF 165 136 DEVK VERSICHERUNGEN Germany 2.91 Insurance ICMIF 166 134 COOP KOBE Japan 2.89 Wholesale and retail 167 165 AUTO CLUB ENTERPRISES USA 2.77 Insurance 71 THE WORLD CO-OPERATIVE MONITOR: EXPLORING THE CO-OPERATIVE ECONOMY | REPORT 2014 ICMIF WCM questionnaire CEPES CoopFR ICMIF NZ.coop WCM questionnaire ICMIF // T = turnover TURNOVER 2012 (BILLION USD) USA 2.76 Insurance 169 162 COOP ADRIATICA Italy 2.76 Wholesale and retail CoopIT 170 177 REWE DORTMUND GROßHANDEL EG Germany 2.75 Wholesale and retail Amadeus 171 132 NTUC INCOME Singapore 2.75 Insurance 172 200 COOPERL ARC ATLANTIQUE France 2.74 Agriculture and food CoopFR 173 - LANDGARD EG Germany 2.74 Agriculture and food Amadeus 174 170 CECAB France 2.70 Agriculture and food CoopFR 175 174 IRISH DAIRY BOARD CO-OPERATIVE LTD Ireland 2.68 Agriculture and food Euricse 176 168 MERCURY GENERAL GROUP USA 2.65 Insurance Euricse 177 171 EVEN France 2.64 Agriculture and food CoopFR 178 172 VALIO GROUP FINLAND Finland 2.64 Agriculture and food Pellervo 179 185 DO-IT-BEST CORP. USA 2.59 Industry 180 167 SODRA SKOGSAGARNA Sweden 2.58 Agriculture and food 181 176 WAWANESA MUTUAL Canada 2.57 Insurance 182 182 ROYAL COSUN Netherlands 2.57 Agriculture and food NCR 183 187 HOK-ELANTO Finland 2.48 Wholesale and retail Pellervo 184 205 DARIGOLD USA 2.46 Agriculture and food NCB 185 186 MURRAY GOULBURN CO-OPERATIVE CO LIMITED Australia 2.46 Agriculture and food Euricse 186 155 MACSF France 2.40 Insurance 187 - SOGIPHAR France 2.39 Wholesale and retail CoopFR 188 218 UNITED SUPPLIERS, INC. USA 2.37 Agriculture and food NCB 189 161 WESTERN & SOUTHERN FINANCIAL USA 2.37 Insurance SOURCE COUNTRY 72 THE WORLD CO-OPERATIVE MONITOR: EXPLORING THE CO-OPERATIVE ECONOMY | REPORT 2014 INDICATOR CALIFORNIA STATE AUTO SECTOR OF ACTIVITY RANKING 2011 164 ORGANISATION RANKING 2012 168 ICMIF ICMIF NCB Euricse ICMIF ICMIF ICMIF BI = Net banking income // PI = premium income 190 210 LIMAGRAIN France 2.35 Agriculture and food 191 175 UNIVÉ ZORG Netherlands 2.34 Insurance ICMIF 192 181 BARMENIA VERSICHERUNGEN Germany 2.34 Insurance ICMIF 193 193 NATIONAL CABLE TELEVISION, INC. USA 2.34 Industry Euricse 194 191 CONSUM Spain 2.33 Agriculture and food CEPES 195 192 GEDEX France 2.32 Wholesale and retail CoopFR 196 268 CRISTAL UNION France 2.32 Agriculture and food CoopFR 197 199 SENTRY INSURANCE USA 2.32 Insurance 198 190 ASSOCIATED WHOLESALERS, INC. USA 2.32 Wholesale and retail 199 180 MATMUT France 2.31 Insurance 200 203 SOUTHERN STATES COOPERATIVE USA 2.29 Agriculture and food NCB 201 226 NTUC FAIRPRICE CO-OPERATIVE LTD Singapore 2.29 Wholesale and retail WCM questionnaire 202 194 SWISS UNION OF RAIFFEISEN BANKS Switzerland 2.29 Banking and financial services 203 195 AMERITAS LIFE USA 2.25 Insurance ICMIF 204 184 THE KYOEI FIRE & MARINE INSURANCE CO Japan 2.23 Insurance ICMIF 205 189 OP-POHJOLA GROUP Finland 2.23 Banking and financial services 206 188 CUNA MUTUAL USA 2.21 Insurance 207 206 UNITED FARMERS OF ALBERTA COOPERATIVE LIMITED Canada 2.14 Agriculture and food 208 208 NFU MUTUAL INSURANCE GROUP UK 2.13 Insurance ICMIF 209 220 PENN MUTUAL USA 2.12 Insurance ICMIF 210 179 GLANBIA IRELAND Ireland 2.09 Agriculture and food Euricse 211 204 GROUPE MAÎTRES LAITIERS DU COTENTIN France 2.08 Agriculture and food CoopFR 73 THE WORLD CO-OPERATIVE MONITOR: EXPLORING THE CO-OPERATIVE ECONOMY | REPORT 2014 CoopFR ICMIF NCB ICMIF Euricse Pellervo ICMIF Euricse // T = turnover TURNOVER 2012 (BILLION USD) USA 2.02 Insurance 213 215 ASSOCIATED FOOD STORES USA 2.01 Wholesale and retail NCB 214 225 FOODSTUFFS SOUTH ISLAND New Zealand 2.00 Wholesale and retail NZ.coop 215 233 FELLESKJØPET AGRI SA Norway 2.00 Wholesale and retail Amadeus 216 222 CENTRAL GROCERS COOPERATIVE USA 1.97 Wholesale and retail NCB 217 238 HCF Australia 1.96 Insurance ICMIF 218 280 STATE INSURANCE FUND USA 1.94 Insurance ICMIF 219 232 REI (RECREATIONAL EQUIPMENT, INC.) USA 1.93 Wholesale and retail NCB 220 267 ZG RAIFFEISEN EG Germany 1.92 Wholesale and retail Amadeus 221 248 BASIN ELECTRIC POWER COOPERATIVE USA 1.92 Industry 222 237 STATE AUTO INSURANCE COMPANIES USA 1.90 Insurance 223 235 FOODSTUFFS (WELLINGTON) COOPERATIVE SOCIETY New Zealand 1.89 Wholesale and retail NZ.coop 224 251 GROUPE INTERSPORT FRANCE France 1.88 Wholesale and retail CoopFR 225 242 NATIONAL LIFE USA 1.88 Insurance ICMIF 226 - KFCCC South Korea 1.87 Insurance ICMIF 227 209 P&V Belgium 1.86 Insurance ICMIF 228 239 HANSEMERKUR VERSICHERUNGSGRUPPE Germany 1.85 Insurance ICMIF 229 202 COFORTA/THE GREENERY Netherlands 1.84 Agriculture and food 230 217 PENSIONDANMARK Denmark 1.84 Insurance ICMIF 231 277 PENSIONS-SICHERUNGS-VEREIN (PSVAG) Germany 1.83 Insurance ICMIF 232 221 JCIF Japan 1.83 Insurance ICMIF 233 207 COOP TOKYO (CO-OP MIRAI) Japan 1.83 Wholesale and retail SOURCE COUNTRY 74 THE WORLD CO-OPERATIVE MONITOR: EXPLORING THE CO-OPERATIVE ECONOMY | REPORT 2014 INDICATOR AUTO CLUB GROUP SECTOR OF ACTIVITY RANKING 2011 216 ORGANISATION RANKING 2012 212 ICMIF NCB ICMIF NCR WCM questionnaire BI = Net banking income // PI = premium income 234 241 THE ECONOMICAL INSURANCE GROUP Canada 1.82 Insurance 235 266 FEBELCO Belgium 1.81 Wholesale and retail Amadeus 236 271 25 MAÏSADOUR France 1.81 Agriculture and food CoopFR 237 236 FUNDACIÓN ESPRIU Spain 1.80 Health and social care 238 261 COOP ESTENSE Italy 1.79 Wholesale and retail 239 249 AMICA MUTUAL USA 1.78 Insurance 240 212 ASSOCIATED MILK PRODUCERS, INC USA 1.78 Agriculture and food NCB 241 250 ATRIA OYJ Finland 1.77 Agriculture and food Pellervo 242 229 VOLKSWOHL BUND VERSICHERUNGEN Germany 1.76 Insurance 243 246 GROUPE EURALIS France 1.74 Agriculture and food 244 253 ELÄKE-FENNIA MUTUAL Finland 1.74 Insurance 245 256 EANDIS Belgium 1.74 Industry 246 270 COUNTRYMARK COOPERATIVE HOLDING CORP. USA 1.74 Agriculture and food 247 243 BLUE CROSS AND BLUE SHIELD OF KANSAS USA 1.73 Insurance 248 252 HOCHWALD MILCH EG Germany 1.69 Agriculture and food Amadeus 249 294 SOUTH DAKOTA WHEAT GROWERS ASSN. USA 1.69 Agriculture and food NCB 250 273 MUTUAL OF AMERICA LIFE USA 1.69 Insurance ICMIF 251 254 SPAREBANK 1 Norway 1.67 Insurance ICMIF 252 262 OCEAN SPRAY USA 1.66 Agriculture and food NCB 253 260 SILVER FERN FARMS New Zealand 1.65 Agriculture and food NZ.coop 254 264 PRAIRIE FARMS DAIRY INC. USA 1.65 Agriculture and food NCB 255 213 CCC Italy 1.64 Industry 256 255 FOREMOST FARMS USA COOPERATIVE USA 1.64 Agriculture and food 75 THE WORLD CO-OPERATIVE MONITOR: EXPLORING THE CO-OPERATIVE ECONOMY | REPORT 2014 ICMIF WCM questionnaire CoopIT ICMIF ICMIF CoopFR ICMIF Amadeus NCB ICMIF Euricse NCB // T = turnover INDICATOR SOURCE SECTOR OF ACTIVITY 224 TURNOVER 2012 (BILLION USD) 258 COUNTRY RANKING 2011 279 ORGANISATION RANKING 2012 257 OK A.M.B.A. Denmark 1.63 Industry Amadeus COÖPERATIEVE MOSADEX U.A. Netherlands 1.63 Wholesale and retail Amadeus Belgium 1.61 Other services Amadeus 259 - SOCIETE INTERNATIONALE DE TELECOMMUNICATIONS AERONAUTIQUES 260 - SACMI Italy 1.61 Industry 261 201 MUTUELLE VAUDOISE Switzerland 1.60 Insurance 262 - DAIRYLEA COOPERATIVE INC. USA 1.59 Agriculture and food NCB 263 272 BIGMAT FRANCE France 1.58 Wholesale and retail CoopFR 264 283 UNICOOP TIRRENO Italy 1.58 Wholesale and retail CoopIT 265 - ADVITAM (GROUPE UNEAL) France 1.57 Agriculture and food CoopFR 266 258 COOP EG Germany 1.56 Wholesale and retail Amadeus 267 128 AGRIBANK, FCB USA 1.56 Banking and financial services 268 275 THE MIDCOUNTIES CO-OPERATIVE LIMITED UK 1.53 Agriculture and food 269 286 LA CAPITALE Canada 1.51 Insurance 270 - CZECH AND MORAVIAN CONSUMER COOPERATIVES Czech Republic 1.50 Wholesale and retail WCM questionnaire 271 278 GADOL France 1.50 Wholesale and retail CoopFR 272 - TAWUNIYA Saudi Arabia 1.50 Insurance 273 295 AFFILIATED FOODS MIDWEST CO-OP INC. USA 1.50 Wholesale and retail 274 298 UNITED MERCHANTS PUBLIC LIMITED COMPANY UK 1.49 Industry 275 - LUR BERRI France 1.49 Other activities 276 274 AMERICAN CRYSTAL SUGAR CO. USA 1.48 Agriculture and food NCB 277 244 COOP KANAGAWA (U CO-OP) Japan 1.47 Wholesale and retail WCM questionnaire 278 296 MFA INCORPORATED USA 1.47 Agriculture and food NCB 76 THE WORLD CO-OPERATIVE MONITOR: EXPLORING THE CO-OPERATIVE ECONOMY | REPORT 2014 Euricse ICMIF NCB Co-operatives UK ICMIF ICMIF NCB Co-operatives UK CoopFR BI = Net banking income // PI = premium income 279 - AFFILIATED FOODS INC. USA 1.46 Wholesale and retail NCB 280 - INNOVATIVE AG SERVICES CO. USA 1.45 Agriculture and food NCB 281 - THE MAIN STREET AMERICA GROUP USA 1.44 Insurance 282 234 FAGOR ELECTRODOMÉSTICOS Spain 1.42 Industry 283 214 ACMN France 1.42 Insurance 284 - NOVA COOP Italy 1.40 Wholesale and retail 285 245 CO-OPERATIVE INSURANCE UK 1.40 Insurance 286 231 TRUE VALUE CORPORATION USA 1.40 Industry 287 - EMC INSURANCE USA 1.38 Insurance ICMIF 288 281 WWK VERSICHERUNGEN Germany 1.37 Insurance ICMIF 289 292 KOMMUNEPENSION (SAMPENSION) Denmark 1.35 Insurance ICMIF 290 - COREN, S.C.G. Spain 1.33 Agriculture and food 291 291 OGLETHORPE POWER CORPORATION USA 1.32 Industry 292 - COOP NORDEST Italy 1.30 Wholesale and retail 293 - TENNESSEE FARMERS INSURANCE USA 1.30 Insurance 294 297 MD & VA MILK PRODUCERS COOPERATIVE ASSN. USA 1.30 Agriculture and food 295 - SANCOR SEGUROS Argentina 1.30 Insurance 296 - COOP ATLANTIQUE France 1.28 Wholesale and retail CoopFR 297 - FARMERS COOPERATIVE COMPANY USA 1.28 Agriculture and food NCB 298 285 ZORG EN ZEKERHEID Netherlands 1.26 Insurance 299 - NORGES RÅFISKLAG SA Norway 1.26 Wholesale and retail 300 - TRI-STATE G&T ASSOCIATION USA 1.26 Industry 77 THE WORLD CO-OPERATIVE MONITOR: EXPLORING THE CO-OPERATIVE ECONOMY | REPORT 2014 ICMIF CEPES ICMIF CoopIT ICMIF NCB CEPES NCB CoopIT ICMIF NCB ICMIF ICMIF Amadeus NCB // T = turnover APPENDIX 2 INDIAN FARMERS FERTILISER COOPERATIVE LIMITED (IFFCO) India 3,096,402.45 Agriculture and food WCM questionnaire 2 3 NH NONGHYUP (FORMERLY NACF) South Korea 2,244,694.95 Agriculture and food WCM questionnaire 3 2 ZENKYOREN Japan 1,660,822.04 Insurance WCM questionnaire 4 8 ACDLEC - E.LECLERC France 1,450,755.42 Wholesale and retail 5 5 NIPPON LIFE Japan 1,382,907.91 Insurance ICMIF 6 9 MEIJI YASUDA LIFE Japan 1,335,442.57 Insurance ICMIF 7 7 REWE GROUP Germany 1,287,326.15 Wholesale and retail Euricse 8 4 ZEN-NOH (NATIONAL FEDERATION OF AGRICULTURAL CO-OPERATIVES) Japan 1,216,528.28 Agriculture and food Euricse 9 6 STATE FARM USA 1,126,293.97 Insurance 10 10 GROUPE CRÉDIT AGRICOLE France 1,029,140.00 Banking and financial services 11 16 EDEKA ZENTRALE Germany 981,942.14 Wholesale and retail 12 12 MAPFRE Spain 980,620.39 Insurance SOURCE COUNTRY 78 THE WORLD CO-OPERATIVE MONITOR: EXPLORING THE CO-OPERATIVE ECONOMY | REPORT 2014 INDICATOR 1 SECTOR RANKING 2011 1 ORGANISATION RANKING 2012 TURNOVER/GDP PER CAPITA 2012 THE 300 LARGEST CO-OPERATIVE AND MUTUAL ORGANISATIONS BY TURNOVER ON GDP PER CAPITA CoopFR ICMIF CoopFR Euricse ICMIF BI = Net banking income // PI = premium income 13 11 KAISER PERMANENTE USA 977,804.96 Insurance 14 14 CHS INC. USA 784,547.53 Agriculture and food WCM questionnaire 15 17 SYSTÈME U France 770,493.88 Wholesale and retail CoopFR 16 15 GROUPE BPCE France 728,564.73 Banking and financial services CoopFR 17 13 SUMITOMO LIFE Japan 667,419.97 Insurance 18 18 MONDRAGON Spain 657,143.09 Industry CEPES 19 21 LIBERTY MUTUAL USA 583,390.86 Insurance ICMIF 20 22 ACHMEA Netherlands 571,535.67 Insurance ICMIF 21 19 THE CO-OPERATIVE GROUP LIMITED UK 569,277.01 Wholesale and retail 22 20 NATIONWIDE USA 547,451.82 Insurance 23 27 GROUPE CRÉDIT MUTUEL France 484,691.74 Banking and financial services CoopFR 24 31 COPERSUCAR Brazil 483,348.57 Industry Euricse 25 25 COVÉA France 478,888.56 Insurance ICMIF 26 32 UNIPOL Italy 444,507.14 Insurance ICMIF 27 23 NEW YORK LIFE USA 431,831.85 Insurance ICMIF 28 24 FONTERRA COOPERATIVE GROUP New Zealand 420,892.81 Agriculture and food 29 36 MASSMUTUAL FINANCIAL USA 415,664.95 Insurance 30 33 JOHN LEWIS PARTNERSHIP PLC UK 398,301.88 Wholesale and retail 31 28 FARMERS INSURANCE GROUP USA 371,915.23 Insurance 32 30 COOP SWISS Switzerland 370,039.02 Wholesale and retail 33 29 R+V VERSICHERUNG Germany 358,167.65 Insurance ICMIF 34 26 GROUPAMA France 347,913.13 Insurance ICMIF 35 34 MIGROS-GENOSSENSCHAFTS-BUND Switzerland 346,060.06 Wholesale and retail 79 THE WORLD CO-OPERATIVE MONITOR: EXPLORING THE CO-OPERATIVE ECONOMY | REPORT 2014 ICMIF ICMIF Co-operatives UK ICMIF NZ.coop ICMIF Co-operatives UK ICMIF Euricse Amadeus // T = turnover TURNOVER/GDP PER CAPITA 2012 Finland 338,089.62 Wholesale and retail 37 53 RABOBANK GROUP Netherlands 327,261.42 Banking and financial services 38 40 BAYWA GROUP Germany 326,212.33 Agriculture and food 39 35 NORTHWESTERN MUTUAL USA 312,590.49 Insurance ICMIF 40 37 USAA GROUP USA 299,000.97 Insurance ICMIF 41 49 ROYAL FRIESLANDCAMPINA Netherlands 295,967.89 Agriculture and food 42 39 HDI Germany 292,575.43 Insurance 43 45 GRUPO EROSKI Spain 290,373.15 Wholesale and retail 44 41 DEBEKA VERSICHERN Germany 282,352.00 Insurance ICMIF 45 47 BUPA UK 281,249.83 Insurance ICMIF 46 44 IFFCO-TOKIO GENERAL INSURANCE India 274,793.09 Insurance ICMIF 47 42 AG2R LA MONDIALE France 272,967.22 Insurance ICMIF 48 46 LAND O'LAKES, INC. USA 272,780.53 Agriculture and food 49 50 VIENNA INSURANCE GROUP Austria 265,951.98 Insurance 50 48 DESJARDINS GROUP Canada 245,460.52 Banking and financial services WCM questionnaire 51 - THE NORINCHUKIN BANK Japan 239,527.16 Banking and financial services Euricse 52 43 DAIRY FARMERS OF AMERICA USA 234,595.89 Agriculture and food NCB 53 55 AGRAVIS RAIFFEISEN AG Germany 220,181.69 Agriculture and food Euricse 54 58 SUEDZUCKER Germany 216,584.84 Agriculture and food Euricse 55 54 WAKEFERN FOOD CORP. USA 212,759.54 Wholesale and retail NCB 56 52 TIAA GROUP USA 208,411.71 Insurance 57 67 ARLA FOODS AMBA Denmark 198,085.26 Agriculture and food SOURCE COUNTRY 80 THE WORLD CO-OPERATIVE MONITOR: EXPLORING THE CO-OPERATIVE ECONOMY | REPORT 2014 INDICATOR SOK CORPORATION SECTOR RANKING 2011 38 ORGANISATION RANKING 2012 36 Pellervo WCM questionnaire Euricse NCR ICMIF CEPES NCB ICMIF ICMIF Amadeus BI = Net banking income 58 59 59 - 60 // PI = premium income GROWMARK, INC. USA 194,343.57 Agriculture and food NCB FORFARMERS GROUP Netherlands 188,392.79 Agriculture and food NCR 62 IN VIVO France 188,233.03 Agriculture and food CoopFR 61 65 COÖPERATIEVE INKOOPVERENIGING SUPERUNIE B.A. Netherlands 186,319.21 Wholesale and retail Amadeus 62 73 LEVERANDØRSELSKABET DANISH CROWN AMBA Denmark 182,549.53 Agriculture and food WCM questionnaire 63 - SINGAPORE NATIONAL CO-OPERATIVE FEDERATION Singapore 180,085.74 Other activities WCM questionnaire 64 56 MACIF France 176,547.48 Insurance ICMIF 65 71 CZ GROEP Netherlands 173,869.34 Insurance ICMIF 66 69 FEDERATED CO-OPERATIVES LIMITED Canada 172,518.73 Wholesale and retail 67 70 PACIFIC LIFE USA 170,985.22 Insurance ICMIF 68 63 GUARDIAN LIFE USA 170,605.55 Insurance ICMIF 69 64 ICMIF Euricse HUK-COBURG Germany 168,170.23 Insurance THE CO-OPERATIVE BANK OF KENYA LIMITED AND SUBSIDIARIES Kenya 167,351.15 Banking and financial services Euricse CoopFR 70 - 71 85 TEREOS France 167,218.65 Agriculture and food 72 61 SIGNAL IDUNA Germany 166,310.04 Insurance 73 96 DLG GROUP Denmark 152,318.57 Agriculture and food 74 74 UNIQA Austria 152,204.08 Insurance ICMIF 75 68 ZENROSAI (NATIONAL FEDERATION OF WORKERS AND CONSUMERS INSURANCE CO-OPERATIVES) Japan 152,201.14 Insurance ICMIF 76 60 FUKOKU LIFE Japan 151,992.45 Insurance ICMIF 77 66 ASSOCIATED WHOLESALE GROCERS, INC USA 151,733.69 Wholesale and retail NCB 78 86 TERRENA France 148,660.93 Agriculture and food CoopFR 79 82 ASTERA France 148,129.76 Wholesale and retail CoopFR 81 THE WORLD CO-OPERATIVE MONITOR: EXPLORING THE CO-OPERATIVE ECONOMY | REPORT 2014 ICMIF Euricse // T = turnover TURNOVER/GDP PER CAPITA 2012 France 144,743.56 Agriculture and food CoopFR 81 79 METSÄ GROUP Finland 144,412.90 Industry Pellervo 82 102 NOWEDA EG APOTHEKERGENOSSENSCHAFT Germany 142,440.47 Wholesale and retail Euricse 83 77 ROYAL LONDON UK 142,317.31 Insurance ICMIF 84 78 FJCC Japan 139,220.46 Insurance ICMIF 85 84 DMK DEUTSCHES MILCHKONTOR GMBH Germany 136,294.81 Agriculture and food 86 76 CATTOLICA ASSICURAZIONI Italy 134,463.47 Insurance 87 93 VIVESCIA (CHAMPAGNE CÉRÉALES + NOURICIA) France 132,194.69 Agriculture and food 88 81 REALE MUTUA Italy 131,471.60 Insurance ICMIF 89 75 ASAHI LIFE Japan 130,285.67 Insurance ICMIF 90 - COOP AMBA Denmark 127,113.65 Wholesale and retail Amadeus 91 - FLORAHOLLAND Netherlands 126,265.09 Agriculture and food NCR USA 125,162.90 Banking and financial services SOURCE COUNTRY INDICATOR SODIAAL SECTOR RANKING 2011 83 ORGANISATION RANKING 2012 80 Euricse ICMIF CoopFR 92 87 FEDERAL FARM CREDIT BANKS FUNDING CORPORATION 93 95 COOPERATIVA LECHERA COLANTA LTDA - COPIDROGAS Colombia 123,367.12 Agriculture and food COLCoop 94 105 AGRICOLA TRE VALLI Italy 122,357.59 Agriculture and food Euricse 95 - MUTUA MADRILEÑA Spain 120,280.92 Insurance 96 130 AGRIAL France 119,778.62 Agriculture and food 97 94 AMERICAN FAMILY INSURANCE USA 118,990.38 Insurance ICMIF 98 98 VARMA MUTUAL PENSION Finland 118,952.89 Insurance ICMIF 99 87 GOTHAER VERSICHERUNGEN Germany 117,896.09 Insurance ICMIF 100 88 MENZIS Netherlands 116,590.29 Insurance ICMIF 101 101 SANACORP EG PHARMAZEUTISCHE GROßHANDLUNG Germany 115,122.12 Wholesale and retail 82 THE WORLD CO-OPERATIVE MONITOR: EXPLORING THE CO-OPERATIVE ECONOMY | REPORT 2014 Euricse ICMIF CoopFR Amadeus BI = Net banking income 102 - 103 // PI = premium income CIC INSURANCE GROUP Kenya 113,075.20 Insurance ICMIF 103 ILMARINEN MUTUAL PENSION Finland 113,009.19 Insurance ICMIF 104 110 AXÉRÉAL France 112,873.42 Agriculture and food 105 226 SANCOR SEGUROS Argentina 111,947.96 Insurance ICMIF 106 107 LV UK 110,576.16 Insurance ICMIF 107 119 GRUPO ASCES Spain 107,338.19 Other services 108 108 ALTE LEIPZIGER Germany 106,282.98 Insurance ICMIF 109 100 AUTO-OWNERS INSURANCE USA 105,873.26 Insurance ICMIF 110 115 KOOPERATIVA FÖRBUNDET (KF) Sweden 105,769.06 Wholesale and retail Euricse 111 - LANTMÄNNEN Sweden 102,066.54 Agriculture and food Euricse 112 114 SECURIAN FINANCIAL USA 102,007.05 Insurance ICMIF 113 112 MUTUAL OF OMAHA USA 101,279.22 Insurance ICMIF 114 117 DZ BANK Germany 100,982.06 Banking and financial services 115 109 THRIVENT FINANCIAL FOR LUTHERANS USA 100,115.61 Insurance 116 116 RZB Austria 99,572.07 Banking and financial services 117 113 MAIF France 98,363.11 Insurance 118 122 LA COOP FÉDÉRÉE Canada 97,322.77 Agriculture and food 119 123 INSULAR LIFE ASSURANCE Philippines 97,108.76 Insurance ICMIF 120 111 SNS REAAL NV Netherlands 96,583.80 Insurance ICMIF 121 127 OLD REPUBLIC INTERNATIONAL CORPORATION USA 96,045.18 Insurance Euricse 122 121 AG PROCESSING INC. USA 95,075.11 Agriculture and food NCB 123 120 UNICOOP FIRENZE Italy 93,887.31 Wholesale and retail CoopIT 83 THE WORLD CO-OPERATIVE MONITOR: EXPLORING THE CO-OPERATIVE ECONOMY | REPORT 2014 CoopFR CEPES Euricse ICMIF Euricse ICMIF WCM questionnaire // T = turnover TURNOVER/GDP PER CAPITA 2012 Italy 93,648.90 Wholesale and retail 125 80 NATIXIS ASSURANCES France 93,100.43 Insurance ICMIF 126 118 ERIE INSURANCE USA 92,829.27 Insurance ICMIF 127 99 JAPANESE CONSUMERS' COOPERATIVE UNION Japan 92,791.61 Wholesale and retail WCM questionnaire 128 - KOPERASI TELEKOMUNIKASI SELULAR ( KISEL ) Indonesia 90,816.42 Other activities WCM questionnaire 129 - SELECTOUR AFAT France 87,045.33 Wholesale and retail 130 124 LÄNSFÖRSÄKRINGAR Sweden 86,921.46 Insurance ICMIF 131 125 LVM VERSICHERUNG Germany 85,077.07 Insurance ICMIF 132 - KFCCC South Korea 82,562.74 Insurance ICMIF 133 151 CONSUM Spain 82,333.06 Agriculture and food CEPES 134 139 COOP ADRIATICA Italy 81,549.73 Wholesale and retail CoopIT 135 - MFA USA 81,548.16 Agriculture and food Euricse 136 - CZECH AND MORAVIAN CONSUMER COOPERATIVES Czech 80,490.24 Wholesale and retail WCM questionnaire 137 148 FENACO Switzerland 80,358.21 Wholesale and retail Amadeus Colombia 80,208.62 Wholesale and retail COLCoop Brazil 79,691.04 Health and social care SOURCE COUNTRY COOPERATIVA NACIONAL DE DROGUISTAS DETALLISTAS COPSERVIR LTDA CENTRAL NACIONAL UNIMED COOPERATIVA CENTRAL Republic INDICATOR PAC 2000 SECTOR RANKING 2011 171 ORGANISATION RANKING 2012 124 Euricse CoopFR 138 150 139 165 140 158 ETIQA TAKAFUL BERHAD Malaysia 78,838.20 Insurance 141 159 RWZ Germany 78,354.03 Agriculture and food 142 152 LOCALTAPIOLA Finland 78,165.62 Insurance ICMIF 143 137 ETHIAS Belgium 77,744.24 Insurance ICMIF 144 166 WESTFLEISCH EG Germany 77,335.17 Agriculture and food Amadeus 145 126 FOODSTUFFS (AUCKLAND) New Zealand 77,327.26 Wholesale and retail NZ.coop 84 THE WORLD CO-OPERATIVE MONITOR: EXPLORING THE CO-OPERATIVE ECONOMY | REPORT 2014 WCM questionnaire ICMIF Euricse BI = Net banking income // PI = premium income 146 132 HEALTHPARTNERS INC. USA 76,813.73 Health and social care 147 161 TRISKALIA France 76,355.55 Agriculture and food 148 200 OHIO NATIONAL LIFE USA 74,072.34 Insurance 149 138 ACE HARDWARE CORP. USA 74,069.69 Industry 150 153 SMABTP France 73,927.10 Insurance 151 - HKSCAN OYJ Finland 73,543.44 Agriculture and food Pellervo 152 133 UNIFIED GROCERS, INC USA 73,354.70 Wholesale and retail NCB 153 144 DIE CONTINENTALE Germany 72,064.24 Insurance 154 154 AGROPUR COOPÉRATIVE Canada 71,903.53 Agriculture and food 155 146 VHV VERSICHERUNGEN Germany 156 - MLEKPOL SPÓLDZIELNIA MLECZARSKA Poland 71,446.06 Agriculture and food Amadeus 157 - SPÓLDZIELNIA MLECZARSKA MLEKOVITA Poland 70,770.03 Agriculture and food Amadeus 158 160 NAVY FEDERAL CREDIT UNION USA 70,552.69 Banking and financial services NCB 159 149 GROUP HEALTH COOPERATIVE USA 70,127.55 Health and social care NCB 160 172 AGRIFIRM Netherlands 69,936.73 Agriculture and food NCR 161 210 COOPERL ARC ATLANTIQUE France 69,051.97 Agriculture and food CoopFR 162 235 FOLKSAM Sweden 68,768.10 Insurance ICMIF 163 164 FM GLOBAL USA 68,324.64 Insurance ICMIF 164 141 DEVK VERSICHERUNGEN Germany 68,317.18 Insurance ICMIF 165 169 CECAB France 67,856.84 Agriculture and food 166 156 ALECTA Sweden 67,667.89 Insurance 167 168 EVEN France 66,396.13 Agriculture and food NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF COOPERATIVE SAVINGS AND CREDIT UNIONS (NACSCU) Poland 66,135.73 Banking and financial services 168 - 71,717.16 Insurance 85 THE WORLD CO-OPERATIVE MONITOR: EXPLORING THE CO-OPERATIVE ECONOMY | REPORT 2014 NCB CoopFR ICMIF NCB ICMIF ICMIF Euricse ICMIF CoopFR ICMIF CoopFR WCM questionnaire // T = turnover INDICATOR SOURCE 171 SECTOR - TURNOVER/GDP PER CAPITA 2012 170 COUNTRY RANKING 2011 208 ORGANISATION RANKING 2012 169 PFA PENSION Denmark 65,738.53 Insurance ICMIF ONEAMERICA GROUP USA 65,622.33 Insurance ICMIF 142 COOP SAPPORO Japan 64,992.34 Wholesale and retail WCM questionnaire 172 177 REWE DORTMUND GROßHANDEL EG Germany 64,593.82 Wholesale and retail Amadeus 173 - LANDGARD EG Germany 64,215.92 Agriculture and food Amadeus Colombia 63,934.86 Wholesale and retail COLCoop 174 174 COOPERATIVA MULTIACTIVA DE EMPLEADOS DE DISTRUIDORES DE DROGAS COPSERVIR LTD - COOSALUD 175 187 FUNDACIÓN ESPRIU Spain 63,787.48 Health and social care 176 140 CALIFORNIA DAIRIES, INC. USA 62,610.44 Agriculture and food NCB 177 143 COOP KOBE Japan 61,797.66 Wholesale and retail WCM questionnaire 178 167 CITIZENS PROPERTY INSURANCE CORP USA 61,465.57 Insurance ICMIF 179 157 MACSF France 60,322.86 Insurance ICMIF 180 - SOGIPHAR France 60,188.09 Wholesale and retail 181 214 SAN CRISTOBAL Argentina 59,866.08 Insurance ICMIF 182 181 TAWUNIYA Saudi Arabia 59,772.88 Insurance ICMIF 183 212 SSQ FINANCIAL GROUP Canada 59,513.47 Insurance ICMIF 184 222 LIMAGRAIN France 59,225.35 Agriculture and food 185 182 THE CO-OPERATORS Canada 58,802.83 Insurance ICMIF 186 219 SUNLIGHT AGRICULTURAL MUTUAL China 58,766.73 Insurance ICMIF 187 196 GEDEX France 58,428.59 Wholesale and retail CoopFR 188 281 CRISTAL UNION France 58,362.20 Agriculture and food CoopFR 189 194 IRISH DAIRY BOARD CO-OPERATIVE LTD Ireland 58,272.41 Agriculture and food Euricse 190 176 MATMUT France 58,209.78 Insurance 86 THE WORLD CO-OPERATIVE MONITOR: EXPLORING THE CO-OPERATIVE ECONOMY | REPORT 2014 WCM questionnaire CoopFR CoopFR ICMIF BI = Net banking income // PI = premium income 191 195 VALIO GROUP FINLAND Finland 57,753.61 Agriculture and food 192 173 COUNTRY FINANCIAL USA 56,481.22 Insurance 193 209 COOP NORGE SA Norway 55,903.37 Wholesale and retail Amadeus 194 216 ROYAL COSUN Netherlands 55,840.29 Agriculture and food NCR 195 230 DANISH AGRO A.M.B.A Denmark 55,236.72 Wholesale and retail Amadeus 196 184 BARMENIA VERSICHERUNGEN Germany 54,962.90 Insurance ICMIF 197 199 NFU MUTUAL INSURANCE GROUP UK 54,621.50 Insurance ICMIF 198 224 HOK-ELANTO Finland 54,190.21 Wholesale and retail Pellervo 199 - ROLNICZA SPÓLDZIELNIA PRODUKCYJNA BIELCZANKA Poland 53,904.86 Agriculture and food Amadeus 200 - S.S. TRAKYA YAGLI TOHUMLAR TARIM SATIS KOOPERATIFLERI BIRLIGI Turkey 53,695.27 Agriculture and food Amadeus 201 185 AUTO CLUB ENTERPRISES USA 53,566.24 Insurance ICMIF 202 183 CALIFORNIA STATE AUTO USA 53,323.47 Insurance ICMIF 203 239 COOP ESTENSE Italy 53,053.11 Wholesale and retail 204 147 NTUC INCOME Singapore 52,796.57 Insurance ICMIF 205 241 UNIMED SEGUROS Brazil 52,483.87 Insurance ICMIF 206 217 GROUPE MAÎTRES LAITIERS DU COTENTIN France 52,452.94 Agriculture and food CoopFR 207 175 FOODSTUFFS SOUTH ISLAND New Zealand 51,771.22 Wholesale and retail NZ.coop 208 254 KLP Norway 51,624.98 Insurance ICMIF 209 191 MERCURY GENERAL GROUP USA 51,242.60 Insurance Euricse 210 233 KOPERASI WARGA SEMEN GRESIK Indonesia 51,018.21 Wholesale and retail 211 206 UNIVÉ ZORG Netherlands 50,984.31 Insurance 212 186 FAGOR ELECTRODOMÉSTICOS Spain 50,318.28 Industry 213 213 WAWANESA MUTUAL Canada 50,284.01 Insurance 87 THE WORLD CO-OPERATIVE MONITOR: EXPLORING THE CO-OPERATIVE ECONOMY | REPORT 2014 Pellervo ICMIF CoopIT WCM questionnaire ICMIF CEPES ICMIF // T = turnover INDICATOR SOURCE SECTOR TURNOVER/GDP PER CAPITA 2012 215 COUNTRY RANKING 2011 - ORGANISATION RANKING 2012 214 COOPERATIVA NACIONAL DE SERVICIOS MÚLTIPLES DE LOS MAESTROS, INC. (COOPNAMA) Dominican 218 DO-IT-BEST CORP. USA 50,030.38 Industry 216 188 FOODSTUFFS (WELLINGTON) COOPERATIVE SOCIETY New Zealand 49,000.79 Wholesale and retail NZ.coop 217 225 OP-POHJOLA GROUP Finland 48,830.68 Banking and financial services Pellervo 218 244 LA SEGUNDA Argentina 48,708.79 Insurance 219 190 CCC Italy 48,609.68 Industry 220 211 THE KYOEI FIRE & MARINE INSURANCE CO Japan 47,762.15 Insurance 221 223 CO-OPERATIVE BULK HANDLING LIMITED Australia 47,616.51 Agriculture and food WCM questionnaire 222 246 DARIGOLD USA 47,614.85 Agriculture and food NCB 223 - SACMI Italy 47,557.34 Industry Euricse 224 268 GROUPE INTERSPORT FRANCE France 47,207.65 Wholesale and retail CoopFR 225 228 SODRA SKOGSAGARNA Sweden 46,964.69 Agriculture and food Euricse 226 - COOPERATIVA OBRERA LIMITADA DE CONSUMO Y VIVIENDA Argentina 46,930.10 Wholesale and retail WCM questionnaire 227 282 COREN, S.C.G. Spain 46,902.12 Agriculture and food CEPES 228 - NFFC South Korea 46,745.99 Insurance 229 258 UNICOOP TIRRENO Italy 46,707.39 Wholesale and retail CoopIT 230 256 UNITED SUPPLIERS, INC. USA 45,817.70 Agriculture and food NCB 231 - S.S. ISTANBUL ECZACILAR URETIM TEMIN DAGITIM KOOPERATIFI Turkey 45,779.36 Wholesale and retail Amadeus 232 179 WESTERN & SOUTHERN FINANCIAL USA 45,732.27 Insurance 233 283 25 MAÏSADOUR France 45,514.55 Agriculture and food CoopFR 234 202 GLANBIA IRELAND Ireland 45,422.60 Agriculture and food Euricse 235 227 NATIONAL CABLE TELEVISION, INC. USA 45,192.89 Industry Euricse 236 292 ZG RAIFFEISEN EG Germany 45,134.48 Wholesale and retail Republic 50,071.22 Banking and financial services 88 THE WORLD CO-OPERATIVE MONITOR: EXPLORING THE CO-OPERATIVE ECONOMY | REPORT 2014 WCM questionnaire NCB ICMIF Euricse ICMIF ICMIF ICMIF Amadeus BI = Net banking income // PI = premium income 237 238 SENTRY INSURANCE USA 44,825.19 Insurance 238 221 ASSOCIATED WHOLESALERS, INC. USA 44,735.54 Wholesale and retail 239 247 SWISS MOBILIAR Switzerland 44,574.14 Insurance 240 245 SOUTHERN STATES COOPERATIVE USA 44,329.73 Agriculture and food NCB 241 269 NTUC FAIRPRICE CO-OPERATIVE LTD Singapore 44,034.59 Wholesale and retail WCM questionnaire 242 257 GROUPE EURALIS France 43,854.64 Agriculture and food CoopFR 243 231 AMERITAS LIFE USA 43,550.23 Insurance ICMIF 244 262 HANSEMERKUR VERSICHERUNGSGRUPPE Germany 43,475.22 Insurance ICMIF 245 - PENSIONS-SICHERUNGS-VEREIN (PSVAG) Germany 42,989.37 Insurance ICMIF 246 243 P&V Belgium 42,969.02 Insurance ICMIF 247 220 ICMIF CUNA MUTUAL USA 42,776.71 Insurance COOPERATIVA DE SALUD Y DESARROLLO INTEGRAL ZONA SUR ORIENTAL DE CARTAGENA - Colombia 42,757.00 Health and social care ICMIF NCB ICMIF 248 - 249 207 SILVER FERN FARMS New Zealand 42,730.13 Agriculture and food 250 279 TAKAFUL MALAYSIA Malaysia 42,619.09 Insurance 251 - CENTRAL COOPERATIVE UNION Bulgaria 42,269.90 Wholesale and retail WCM questionnaire 252 260 UNITED FARMERS OF ALBERTA COOPERATIVE LIMITED Canada 41,833.06 Agriculture and food Euricse 253 - FEBELCO Belgium 41,685.11 Wholesale and retail Amadeus 254 280 NOVA COOP Italy 41,504.10 Wholesale and retail CoopIT 255 299 EMMI Switzerland 41,268.80 Agriculture and food Euricse 256 251 VOLKSWOHL BUND VERSICHERUNGEN Germany 41,226.49 Insurance ICMIF 257 261 PENN MUTUAL USA 40,993.47 Insurance ICMIF 258 249 COFORTA/THE GREENERY Netherlands 40,107.40 Agriculture and food 89 THE WORLD CO-OPERATIVE MONITOR: EXPLORING THE CO-OPERATIVE ECONOMY | REPORT 2014 COLCoop NZ.coop ICMIF NCR // T = turnover TURNOVER/GDP PER CAPITA 2012 Belgium 40,055.88 Industry 260 284 BIGMAT FRANCE France 39,837.68 Wholesale and retail CoopFR 261 271 HOCHWALD MILCH EG Germany 39,641.84 Agriculture and food Amadeus 262 - ADVITAM (GROUPE UNEAL) France 39,439.30 Agriculture and food CoopFR 263 - THE MIDCOUNTIES CO-OPERATIVE LIMITED UK 39,357.51 Agriculture and food Co-operatives UK 264 250 JCIF Japan 39,180.85 Insurance ICMIF 265 255 AUTO CLUB GROUP USA 39,116.95 Insurance ICMIF 266 240 COOP TOKYO (CO-OP MIRAI) Japan 39,112.65 Wholesale and retail WCM questionnaire 267 253 ASSOCIATED FOOD STORES USA 38,860.98 Wholesale and retail NCB 268 - ATRIA OYJ Finland 38,798.87 Agriculture and food Pellervo 269 - COOP NORDEST Italy 38,386.45 Wholesale and retail CoopIT 270 298 UNITED MERCHANTS PUBLIC LIMITED COMPANY UK 38,280.20 Industry 271 - ELÄKE-FENNIA MUTUAL Finland 38,098.65 Insurance 272 263 CENTRAL GROCERS COOPERATIVE USA 38,030.04 Wholesale and retail NCB 273 294 GADOL France 37,845.79 Wholesale and retail CoopFR 274 - STATE INSURANCE FUND USA 37,563.13 Insurance 275 - LUR BERRI France 37,447.42 Other activities 276 296 PPS South Africa 37,318.43 Insurance 277 276 REI (RECREATIONAL EQUIPMENT, INC.) USA 37,315.05 Wholesale and retail 278 - 279 - 280 295 281 285 SOURCE COUNTRY INDICATOR EANDIS SECTOR RANKING 2011 293 ORGANISATION RANKING 2012 259 Amadeus Co-operatives UK ICMIF ICMIF CoopFR ICMIF NCB ASEGURADORA SOLIDARIA DE COLOMBIA SOLIDARIA - CONAFE SOCIETE INTERNATIONALE DE TELECOMMUNICATIONS AERONAUTIQUES BASIN ELECTRIC POWER COOPERATIVE Colombia 37,243.82 Insurance COLCoop Belgium 37,103.51 Other services Amadeus USA 37,083.16 Industry STATE AUTO INSURANCE COMPANIES USA 36,803.21 Insurance 90 THE WORLD CO-OPERATIVE MONITOR: EXPLORING THE CO-OPERATIVE ECONOMY | REPORT 2014 NCB ICMIF BI = Net banking income 282 - 283 // PI = premium income CAMST Italy 36,776.70 Other services 274 COOP EG Germany 36,671.76 Wholesale and retail Amadeus 284 273 MURRAY GOULBURN CO-OPERATIVE CO LIMITED Australia 36,479.91 Agriculture and food Euricse 285 290 NATIONAL LIFE USA 36,245.88 Insurance 286 - COOP LOMBARDIA Italy 36,228.78 Wholesale and retail 287 242 CO-OPERATIVE INSURANCE UK 36,007.02 Insurance 288 - COOPERATIVA NACIONAL CAFETERA - UCC Colombia 35,965.62 Agriculture and food COLCoop 289 - TINE SA Norway 35,654.72 Agriculture and food WCM questionnaire 290 229 ACMN France 35,605.28 Insurance ICMIF 291 - THE ECONOMICAL INSURANCE GROUP Canada 35,559.63 Insurance ICMIF 292 278 COÖPERATIEVE MOSADEX U.A. Netherlands 35,422.28 Wholesale and retail Amadeus 293 - OKREGOWA SPÓLDZIELNIA MLECZARSKA W LOWICZU Poland 35,149.34 Agriculture and food Amadeus 294 - NORTURA SA Norway 34,587.47 Agriculture and food Amadeus 295 297 AMICA MUTUAL USA 34,415.51 Insurance 296 252 ASSOCIATED MILK PRODUCERS, INC USA 34,319.79 Agriculture and food 297 - GJENSIDIGE FORSIKRING Norway 34,139.62 Insurance 298 - COUNTRYMARK COOPERATIVE HOLDING CORP. USA 33,566.15 Agriculture and food 299 291 BLUE CROSS AND BLUE SHIELD OF KANSAS USA 33,427.69 Insurance ICMIF 300 - PENSIONDANMARK Denmark 32,627.31 Insurance ICMIF 91 THE WORLD CO-OPERATIVE MONITOR: EXPLORING THE CO-OPERATIVE ECONOMY | REPORT 2014 Euricse ICMIF CoopIT ICMIF ICMIF NCB ICMIF NCB // T = turnover APPENDIX 3 ORGANIZATIONS THAT SUBMITTED THE WORLD CO-OPERATIVE MONITOR SURVEY 183 50 co-operatives countries Argentina BANCO CREDICOOP COOPERATIVO LIMITADO Belgium TEQUIERO CVBA Argentina COOPERATIVA ELECTRICA LIMITADA DE CORONEL PRINGLES Belgium TR@ME Argentina COOPERATIVA OBRERA LIMITADA DE CONSUMO Y VIVIENDA Bhutan TSIRANG POULTRY CO-OPERATIVE Argentina INSTITUTO MOVILIZADOR DE FONDOS COOPERATIVOS COOP. LTDA. Brazil CENTRAL NACIONAL UNIMED COOPERATIVA CENTRAL Australia CAPRICORN Brazil ORGANIZAÇÃO DAS COOPERATIVAS BRASILEIRAS Australia CO-OPERATIVE BULK HANDLING LIMITED Brazil SICREDI PIONEIRA RS Belgium ALTERFIN CVBA Brazil UNIMED DO BRASIL Belgium AZIMUT Brazil UNISAUDE CENTRO OESTE Belgium DAMNET Bulgaria CENTRAL COOPERATIVE UNION Belgium ECOPOWER Canada CALGARY CO-OPERATIVE ASSOCIATION LTD. Belgium POINT DE MIRE BRABANT WALLON Canada COOP DE SOLIDARITÉ WEBTV 92 THE WORLD CO-OPERATIVE MONITOR: EXPLORING THE CO-OPERATIVE ECONOMY | REPORT 2014 Canada CO-OPERATIVE HOUSING FEDERATION OF CANADA France MEZCALITO Canada DESJARDINS GROUP France POLLEN SCOP Canada FEDERATION QUEBECOISE DES COOPERATIVES EN MILIEU SCOLAIRE (FQCMS) France SECAD Canada GLOBAL CO-OPERATIVE DEVELOPMENT GROUP INC France SOCOREC Canada KAILASA HOUSING CO-OPERATIVE France SOK Canada LA COOP FÉDÉRÉE India CO-OPERATIVE HOUSE BUILDING AND FINANCE CORPORATION LTD. Canada MANITOBA COOPERATIVE ASSOCIATION India FEROKE COOPERATIVE URBAN BANK LIMITED Canada ONTARIO CO-OPERATIVE ASSOCIATION India INDIAN FARMERS FERTILISER COOPERATIVE LIMITED (IFFCO) Canada SOCODEVI India NATIONAL COOPERATIVE AGRICULTURE & RURAL DEVELOPMENT BANKS' FEDERATION LTD. Canada THE CO-OPERATORS GROUP LIMITED India NATIONAL FEDERATION OF STATE COOPERATIVE BANKS LTD. (NAFSCOB) Colombia COOPERATIVA MÉDICA DEL VALLE Y DE PROFESIONALES - COOMEVA India SAMBHRAM INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY Colombia COOPERATIVA SERVIACTIVA India THE DELHI STATE CONSUMERS CO-OPERATIVE FEDERATION LTD. Costa Rica COOPE-ANDE N°1, R.L. Indonesia CREDIT UNION COORDINATION ORGANISATION OF INDONESIA Czech Republic CZECH AND MORAVIAN CONSUMER COOPERATIVES Indonesia INKOPDIT (INDUK KOPERASI INDONESIA)/CUCO (CREDIT UNION CENTRAL OF INDONESIA) Democratic Republic of the Congo COUP DE POUCE ONGD Indonesia KOPERASI BMT UGT SIDOGIRI Denmark LEVERANDØRSELSKABET DANISH CROWN AMBA Indonesia KOPERASI KREDIT CU LANTANG TIPO Dominican Republic COOPERATIVA NACIONAL DE SERVICIOS MÚLTIPLES DE LOS MAESTROS, INC. (COOPNAMA) Indonesia KOPERASI SIMPAN PINJAM JASA / KOSPIN JASA (JASA CREDIT UNION) El Salvador FUNDACIÓN PROMOTORA DE COOPERATIVAS Indonesia KOPERASI TELEKOMUNIKASI SELULAR ( KISEL ) Finland 3ITECH Indonesia KOPERASI UNIT DESA (KUD) MERPATI France BATICOOP Indonesia KOPERASI WARGA SEMEN GRESIK France GRAP Indonesia KPBS PANGALENGAN France MEDIA-PRO Indonesia KPSBU JABAR 93 THE WORLD CO-OPERATIVE MONITOR: EXPLORING THE CO-OPERATIVE ECONOMY | REPORT 2014 Indonesia SEJAHTERA BERSAMA COOPERATIVE Italy UNIPOL GRUPPO FINANZIARIO SPA Ireland DUBLIN FOOD COOPERATIVE Jamaica TIP FRIENDLY SOCIETY Ireland IRISH LEAGUE OF CREDIT UNIONS Japan CHIBA CO-OP (CO-OP MIRAI) Ireland KENMARE CREDIT UNION LTD Japan COOP KANAGAWA (U CO-OP) Ireland NABCO (NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF BUILDING CO-OPERATIVES) Japan COOP KOBE Ireland THE BRIDGE STREET CO-OPERATIVE SOCIETY LTD Japan COOP SAPPORO Iran IRAN CENTRAL CHAMBER OF COOPERATIVES (ICC) Japan COOP TOKYO (CO-OP MIRAI) Israel AUZO LAGUN S.COOP Japan HEW COOP JAPAN Israel O-SHARE Japan JAPAN WORKERS' CO-OPERATIVE UNION Italy AGRINTESA SOC. COOP. AGRICOLA Japan JAPANESE CONSUMERS' CO-OPERATIVE UNION Italy ALIMENTARISTI ASTIGIANI ASSOCIATI SCRL Japan JAPANESE HEALTH AND WELFARE COOPERATIVE FEDERATION Italy CAVIT SC Japan KYOTO CO-OP Italy CEFLA S. C. Japan MIYAGI CO-OP Italy CITTÀ SO.LA.RE. SOC. COOP. SOCIALE A R.L. Japan NATIONAL FEDERATION OF FOREST OWNERS' CO-OPERATIVE ASSOCIATIONS (ZENMORI-REN) Italy CLAB SOCIETÀ COOPERATIVA SOCIALE Japan OSAKA IZUMI CO-OP Italy CONSERVE ITALIA SOCIETÀ COOPERATIVA AGRICOLA Japan PAL-SYSTEM TOKYO Italy CONSORZIO CO&SO FIRENZE CONSORZIO PER LA COOPERAZIONE E LA SOLIDARIETÀ CONSORZIO DI COOPERATIVE SOCIALI A.R.L. Japan SAITAMA CO-OP (CO-OP MIRAI) Italy COOPERATIVA DELLA COMUNITÀ SOC. COOP. SOCIALE Japan ZENKYOREN Italy IRS L'AURORA COOPERATIVA SOCIALE Japan ZENROSAI Italy LEGACOOPBUND Lithuania LIETUVOS CENTRINE KREDITO UNIJA (LITHUANIAN CENTRAL CREDIT UNION) Italy L'OFFICINA DELL'AIAS COOPERATIVA SOCIALE Malaysia KOOP MKM Italy MEZZACORONA SOCIETÀ COOPERATIVA AGRICOLA Maldives SOUTHERN FARMERS COOPERATIVE SOCIETY 94 THE WORLD CO-OPERATIVE MONITOR: EXPLORING THE CO-OPERATIVE ECONOMY | REPORT 2014 Mexico CAJA POPULAR MEXICANA SC DE AP DE RL DE CV Philippines IFUGAO GLOBAL ENTREPRENEURS MULTIPURPOSE COOPERATIVE Mongolia NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF MONGOLIAN AGRICULTURAL COOPERATIVES Philippines ILIGAN CITY GOVERNMENT EMPLOYEES MULTIPURPOSE Myanmar CENTRAL COOPERATIVE SOCIETY Philippines KITANGLAD MPC Nepal LALITPUR DISTRICT FEDERATION OF SAVING AND CREDIT COOPERATIVES LIMITED Philippines REGIONAL CONSULAR OFFICE BICOL EMPLOYEES MULTI-PURPOSE COOPERATIVE (RCOBEMPC) Nepal PRAMARSHA SAVING AND CREDIT CO OPERATIVE SOCIETY LTD Poland NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF COOPERATIVE SAVINGS AND CREDIT UNIONS (NACSCU) Netherlands ASSOCITION OF CREDIT UNIONS IN THE NETHERLANDS Poland NATIONAL COOPERATIVE COUNCIL (KRAJOWA RADA SPÓŁDZIELCZA) Netherlands COOP NEDERLAND B.V. Puerto Rico COOPERATIVA ZENO GANDÍA Netherlands RABOBANK GROUP Rwanda RWANDA BEEKEEPER COOPERATIVE New Zealand DAIRY GOAT CO-OPERATIVE (N.Z.) LIMITED Singapore NTUC FAIRPRICE CO-OPERATIVE LTD New Zealand ELECTRICITY ASHBURTON Singapore NTUC INCOME New Zealand PHARMACY WHOLESALERS BAY OF PLENTY LTD Singapore SEACARE CO-OPERATIVE LTD New Zealand RODNEY CO-OPERATIVE LIME COMPANY LTD Singapore SINGAPORE NATIONAL CO-OPERATIVE FEDERATION New Zealand THE CO-OPERATIVE BANK South Korea ICOOP KOREA Nigeria DE PARACH MULTIPURPOSE COOPERATIVE SOCIETY LIMITED South Korea KOREAN NATIONAL FEDERATION OF FISHERIES COOPERATIVES Norway FEDERATION OF NORWEGIAN AGRICULTURAL CO-OPERATIVES South Korea N.F.C.F.(NATIONAL FORESTRY COOPERATIVE FEDERATION) Norway TINE SA South Korea NATIONAL CREDIT UNION FEDERATION OF KOREA(NACUFOK) Pakistan BETTER EDUCATION FOR ALL BEFA FOUNDATION PAKISTAN South Korea NH NONGHYUP (FORMERLY NACF) Pakistan KARACHI CO-OPERATIVE HOUSING SOCIETIES UNION LTD Spain LA LUNA GESTION DE SERVICIOS SCOOP Panama COFEP, R.L. Spain PRIMITIVE FILMS SCCL Paraguay COOPERATIVA DE AHORRO, CRÉDITO Y SERVICIOS UNIVERSITARIA LTDA. Spain MACROSAD, SCA Philippines AGRI SERVICES PLUS MULTI-PURPOSE COOPERATIVE Spain FUNDACIÓN ESPRIU Philippines CARITAS SALVE CREDIT COOPERATIVE 95 THE WORLD CO-OPERATIVE MONITOR: EXPLORING THE CO-OPERATIVE ECONOMY | REPORT 2014 Sri Lanka KOTIKAWATTA THRIFE AND CREDIT COOPERATIVE SOCIETY LTD USA BUSHWICK FOOD COOP Sri Lanka NATIONAL FISHERIES FEDERATION USA CDS CONSULTING CO-OP Sri Lanka SRI LANKA CONSUMER COOPERATIVE SOCIETIES FEDERATION LIMITED (COOPFED) USA CHS INC. Thailand THE COOPERATIVE LEAGUE OF THAILAND (CLT) USA COBANK Turkey PANKOBİRLİK USA COMMON GROUND FOOD CO-OP United Kingdom CALVERTS NORTH STAR PRESS LTD USA FERTILE UNDERGROUND United Kingdom CDS CO-OPERATIVES USA NEIGHBORING FOOD CO-OP ASSOCIATION United Kingdom COOPERATIVE BUSINESS CONSULTANTS USA SITKA FOOD CO-OP United Kingdom CO-OPERATIVES UK USA VALLEY ALLIANCE OF WORKER CO-OPERATIVES United Kingdom DELTA-T DEVICES LIMITED United Kingdom FAIR TRADER United Kingdom LONDON CAPITAL CREDIT UNION United Kingdom NORTH WEST HOUSING SERVICES United Kingdom NORTHAMPTONSHIRE CDA LTD United Kingdom PLUNKETT FOUNDATION United Kingdom SCOTTISH MIDLAND CO-OPERTAIVE SOCIETY United Kingdom THE CO-OPERATIVE GROUP United Kingdom THE CO-OPERATIVE PARTY United Kingdom THE PHONE CO-OP United Kingdom TOWER HAMLETS CO-OPERATIVE DEVELOPMENT AGENCY United Kingdom WAVE DESIGN LTD 96 THE WORLD CO-OPERATIVE MONITOR: EXPLORING THE CO-OPERATIVE ECONOMY | REPORT 2014 REFERENCES Andersen H., Berg S.A., Jansen E.S. (2012),The Macrodynamics of Operating Income in the Norwegian Banking Sector, Journal of Bank Management., Vol. 11 Issue 1, pp. 7-29. Kyriakopoulos, K. Meulenberg, M. Nilsson, J. (2004) The impact of cooperative structure and firm culture market orientation and performance. Agribusiness. 20, 4, pp. 379-396. Austin, J. Stevenson, H. Skillern, J.W. (2006), Social and Commercial Entrepreneurship: Same, Different, or Both?, Entrepreneurship Theory And Practice, January, 1-22. Lerman, Z. Parliament, C. (1991) Size and industry effects in the performance of agricultural cooperatives, European Review of Agricultural Economics, 6, 1, pp- 1529. Beaubien L. (2011), Co-operative Accounting: Disclosing Redemption Contingencies for Member Shares, Journal of Co-operative Studies, Volume 44, Number 2, August 2011, pp. 38-44. Lileikiene A., Likus A. (2011) Analysis of Change Effect in the Market Interest Rate on Net Interest Income of Commercial Banks, Engineering Economics. 2011, Vol. 22 Issue 3, pp. 241-254. Beaubien L., Rixon D. (2012), Key Performance Indicators in Co-operatives: Directions and Principles, Journal of Co-operative Studies, Volume 45, Number 2, Autumn 2012, pp. 5-15. López-Espinosa G., Maddocks J., Polo-Garrido F. (2009), Equity-Liabilities Distinction: The case for Cooperatives, Journal of International Financial Management & Accounting, Vol. 20, Issue 3, pp. 274-306. Demirgüç-Kunt A., Laeven L., Levine R. (2004), Regulations, Market Structure, Institutions, and the Cost of Financial Intermediation”, Journal of Money, Credit, and Banking, Vol.36, No. 3 (Part 2), pp. 593-622. Mancino, A. Thomas, A. (2005) “An Italian Pattern of Social Enterprise: The Social Cooperative”. Nonprofit management & leadership. 15, 3, pp. 357-369. Marin-Sanchez M., Melia-Martì E. (2006), The New European Co-operative Societies and the Need for a Normalized Accounting in the European Union, Symposium on Accounting for Co-operatives Proceedings, Saint Mary’s University, MMCCU, John Chamard & Tom Webb, Editors. Doran G.T. (1981) There’s a S.M.A.R.T. way to write management’s goals and objectives. Management Review. 70, 11, 35-36. Hahna M., O’Brien E.J. (2012), Weak instruments in estimating business cycle effects on banks’ interest income, Applied Economics Letters, Vol.19, Issue 14, pp. 1417–1420 Maudos J., Solís L. (2009), The determinants of net interest income in the Mexican banking system: An integrated model, Journal of Banking & Finance Vol. 33, Issue 10, pp. 1920-1931. Herman, R.D. Renz, D. (1999) Theses on Nonprofit Organisational Effectiveness. Nonprofit and Voluntary Sector Quarterly. 28, 2, 107-126. Saunders A., Schumacher L. (2000), The Determinants of Bank Interest Rate Margins: An International Study, Journal of International Money and Finance, Vol. 19, pp. 813-832. Ho T., Saunders A. (1981), The Determinants of Bank Interest Rate Margins: Theory and Empirical Evidence”, Journal of Financial and Quantitative Analysis, Vol. 16, pp. 581-600. 97 THE WORLD CO-OPERATIVE MONITOR: EXPLORING THE CO-OPERATIVE ECONOMY | REPORT 2014 TEAM & STEERING COMMITTEE THE WORLD CO-OPERATIVE MONITOR TEAM & STEERING COMMITTEE TEAM CHIARA CARINI European Research Institute on Cooperative and Social Enterprises (Euricse) ILANA GOTZ European Research Institute on Cooperative and Social Enterprises (Euricse) ERICKA COSTA University of Trento (Italy) and European Research Institute on Cooperative and Social Enterprises (Euricse) CARLA RANICKI Co-operative Stories author EDDI FONTANARI European Research Institute on Cooperative and Social Enterprises (Euricse) and University of Insubria, Varese (Italy) ALEX RIGOTTI European Research Institute on Cooperative and Social Enterprises (Euricse) 98 THE WORLD CO-OPERATIVE MONITOR: EXPLORING THE CO-OPERATIVE ECONOMY | REPORT 2014 STEERING COMMITTEE MICHELE ANDREAUS is Professor of Business Administration, Accounting and Social Accounting at the University of Trento (Italy). He is a member of CSEAR (Center for Social and Environmental Accounting Research) at St. Andrews University – UK. CARLO BORZAGA is Professor of Economic Policy at the University of Trento (Italy), Faculty of Economics. He is currently the President of Euricse - European Research Institute on Cooperative and Social Enterprises - and chairs the Master’s Programme in Management of Social Enterprises (GIS) at the University of Trento. MAURIZIO CARPITA is Professor of Statistics and Scientific Director of the DMS StatLab - Data Methods and Systems Statistical Laboratory at the University of Brescia (Italy). LOU HAMMOND KETILSON is the Fellow in Co-operative Management, Centre for the Study of Cooperatives and Adjunct Professor, Johnson-Shoyama Graduate School of Public Policy, University of Saskatchewan (Canada). ANN HOYT is Professor and Chair of the department of Consumer Science at the University of WisconsinMadison (USA). She teaches courses in Retail Financial Analysis and Consumer Cooperatives. For several years she was a co-principal investigator for a large grant to the University of Wisconsin Center for Cooperatives designed to study the economic impact of U.S. cooperatives. 99 THE WORLD CO-OPERATIVE MONITOR: EXPLORING THE CO-OPERATIVE ECONOMY | REPORT 2014 PANU KALMI is a Professor of Economics at the University of Vaasa (Finland), and is a member of the Academic Think-tank of the European Association of Co-operative Banks. AKIRA KURIMOTO is Director of the Consumer Co-operative Institute of Japan and Deputy Director of the Research Center for Solidarity-based Society. He is a member of the ICA Principles Work Group. He served as Chair of the ICA Research Committee (2001–2005) and is Vice Chair of the ICA Asia Pacific Research Committee. SIGISMUNDO BIALOSKORSKI NETO is Professor and Director of the University of São Paulo, School of Economics, Business Administration and Accounting at Ribeirão Preto (Brazil). Professor Bialoskorski Neto is Academic Coordinator of the Cooperatives Organizations Research and Study Program and member of the board of the Center for Organization Studies – Research Center in University of São Paulo. He is also a member of the ICA Research Committee. SONJA NOVKOVIC is a Professor of Economics and Co-operative Management Education program at Saint Mary’s University (Canada). She is the Chair of the ICA Research Committee and Academic Co-lead of the Measuring the Co-operative Difference Research Network (MCDRN) in partnership with Co-operatives and Mutuals Canada. ELIANE O’SHAUGHNESSY is Director, Office of the President and Chief Executive Officer of Desjardins Group. GREG PATMORE is Professor of Business and Labour History and Director of the Business and Labour History Group and the Co-operative Research Group in the School of Business, The University of Sydney (Australia). He also chairs the School’s Ethics Committee. 100 THE WORLD CO-OPERATIVE MONITOR: EXPLORING THE CO-OPERATIVE ECONOMY | REPORT 2014 GIANLUCA SALVATORI is Chief Executive Officer of Euricse. He is also the founder of Progetto Manifattura, a company established by the Government of the Trentino Region with the mission of re-developing an industrial site to host an “innovation hub” on green and clean technologies. From 2003-2008 he was the Minister of Planning, Research and Innovation for the Autonomous Province of Trento. GOPAL N. SAXENA at present is a member on the Board of IFFCO and is the Head of Board, Shares and Cooperative Services Departments at Head Office, New Delhi. He obtained his master degree in Statistics and Ph.D. for his work in Mathematical Statistics. Since his joining IFFCO in the year 1971, he has worked in various capacities. He has Specialization in Cooperative Laws and his main job is to Keep IFFCO within the ambit of Cooperative Principles, Cooperative Acts and IFFCO bylaws. BARRY W. SILVER is Executive Vice President, Corporate Banking Group and member of the Executive Council at the National Cooperative Bank in Washington, DC. He has an M.B.A. from American University and serves as a cooperative and finance consultant to the World Bank and USAID/ACDI-VOCA. Mr. Silver has over 35 years’ experience working with cooperatives and in 2014 was inducted into the U.S. Cooperative Hall of Fame. MUHAMMAD TAUFIQ is Senior Adviser for International Relationship to The Minister of Cooperatives and Small-Medium Enterprises of The Republic of Indonesia. Dr. Taufiq also chairs some of the most important Cooperative Organizations in Indonesia. FREDRICK O. WANYAMA is an Associate Professor of Political Science and Director of the School of Development and Strategic Studies at Maseno University (Kenya). He has served as a consultant for the ILO on many projects on co-operatives and the social economy in Africa. 101 THE WORLD CO-OPERATIVE MONITOR: EXPLORING THE CO-OPERATIVE ECONOMY | REPORT 2014 PROMOTERS INTERNATIONAL CO-OPERATIVE ALLIANCE WWW.ICA.COOP The International Co-operative Alliance is an independent, non-governmental association which unites, represents and serves co-operatives worldwide. Founded in 1895, the Alliance has member organisations in 100 countries active in all sectors of the economy. Together these co-operatives represent nearly one billion individuals worldwide. EUROPEAN RESEARCH INSTITUTE ON COOPERATIVE AND SOCIAL ENTERPRISES WWW.EURICSE.EU The mission of the European Research Institute on Cooperative and Social Enterprises is to promote knowledge development and innovation for the field of co-operatives, social enterprises and other non-profit organizations engaged in the production of goods and services. The Institute aims to deepen the understanding of these types of organizations and their impact on economic and social development, furthering their growth and assisting them to work more effectively. Through activities directed toward and in partnership with both the scholarly community and practitioners, including primarily theoretical and applied research and training, we address issues of national and international interest to this sector, favouring openness and collaboration. 102 THE WORLD CO-OPERATIVE MONITOR: EXPLORING THE CO-OPERATIVE ECONOMY | REPORT 2014 ORGANISATIONAL PARTNERS MADE POSSIBLE BY THE SUPPORT OF OUR ORGANISATIONAL PARTNERS FUNDACIÓN ESPRIU www.fundacionespriu.coop Fundación Espriu is the apex organization that brings together Spanish health cooperatives based on Dr.Josep Espriu’s vision, a system of healthcare services which put individuals before economic profit. Espriu’s health cooperatives allow development of social high-quality medicine in the framework of a health system co-managed by all stakeholders, where patients play an active role in the decision process and doctors can develop their job with freedom. OVERSEAS COOPERATIVE DEVELOPMENT COUNCIL www.ocdc.coop The U.S. Overseas Cooperative Development Council brings together organizations committed to building a more prosperous world through cooperatives. Its mission is to champion, advocate and promote effective international cooperative development. Its key areas of focus are food security, income development and democracy building. OCB SYSTEM Cooperatives in Brazil number 6.6 thousand with 11 million members and they provide 320 thousand direct jobs. As a differentiated business model, Brazilian cooperatives rely on the permanent support of OCB System to defend and promote their interests and rights. The system is composed of three institutions working together. The Brazilian Cooperatives Organization (OCB) is the representative entity, acting to promote the efficiency and economic and social effectiveness of cooperatives – either in Brazil or overseas. The National Service of Cooperative Learning (Sescoop) promotes actions, courses and programs for the management and social development of the cooperatives. Finally, the Brazilian National Confederation of Cooperatives (CNCoop) provides union representation of the economic category interests in the cooperativist sector with public and private agencies. 103 THE WORLD CO-OPERATIVE MONITOR: EXPLORING THE CO-OPERATIVE ECONOMY | REPORT 2014 CREDITS Attribution 3.0 you are free to share and to remix, you must attribute the work Contents Euricse Research Team Graphic Design VitaminaStudio.it Printing completed in September 2014 Download PDF http://goo.gl/eNBjqF Download PDF http://goo.gl/eNBjqF